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College writing
often involves integrating information from published sources into
your own writing in order to add credibility and authority--this
process is essential to research and the production of new knowledge.
However, when building on the work of
others, you need to be careful not to plagiarize: "to
steal and pass off (the ideas and words of another) as one's own"
or to "present as new and original an idea or product derived
from an existing source."1 The University
of Wisconsin takes very seriously this act of "intellectual
burglary," and the penalties
are severe.
These materials will help you avoid plagiarism
by teaching you how to properly integrate information from published
sources into your own writing.
1. Merriam Webster's Collegiate
Dictionary, 10th ed. (Springfield, MA: Merriam-Webster, 1993),
888. |