PlagiarismPlagiarism is the unacknowledged use of another persons ideas and/or words. Types
of plagiarism include the following: Original Source As masses of women have moved into the economy, families have been hit by a speed up in work and family life. There is no more time in the day than there was when wives stayed home, but there is twice as much to get done. It is mainly women who absorb this speed-up. Twenty percent of the men in my study shared housework equally. Seventy percent of men did a substantial amount (less than half but more than a third), and 10 percent did less than a third. (Arlie Hochshild and Anne Machung, The Second Shift) Plagiarism of Ideas More and more women are going to work. Unfortunately, their husbands are no more inclined to help with housework than they were when women stayed home. Only twenty percent of men do the same amount of work around the house as their wives. Notice that while the writer has modified the language of the original, he has not identified his source or even indicated that he has used a source. A reader is forced to conclude that the writer came up with these ideas and statistics on his own. Since this is not the case, the writer is taking credit for work he has not done, and this is plagiarism. Plagiarism of Words As Hochshild and Machung point out, there is no more time in the day than there was when wives stayed home, but there is twice as much to get done, and it is mainly women who are doing it. Notice that while the writer has clearly identified her source of information, she
has borrowed the original language of her source with almost no modification. Because
the borrowings are not in quotation marks, a reader must conclude that the writer
came up with these words on her own. This writer also is taking credit for work she
has not done, and this too is plagiarism. |