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INST 2201: Theology of Social Justice

This guide provides information about library research and library resources on the topics of social justice, human rights, and religious conflict.

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This is a great tool to help you collect, organize, cite, and share research. It handles 100s of citation styles and allows for collaboration.

Citing Sources

Five Types of Plagiarism

Type 1: Copy and Paste Plagiarism or Direct Plagiarism

When you copy a sentence, phrase, or paragraph word for word, but do not quote your source.

Type 2: Word Switch Plagiarism

When you rephrase a person's work and insert it into your own work without acknowledging its original source.  If you take a sentence from a source and change a few words without acknowledging your source, it is still plagiarism.

This is not paraphrasing. 

Type 3: Mosaic or Blending Plagiarism

When you: mix words or ideas from an unacknowledged source in with your own words or ideas; mix together uncited words and ideas from several sources into a single work; or mix together properly cited uses of a source with uncited uses.

Type 4: Insufficient Acknowledgement

When you correctly cite your source once, but continue to use the author's work with out giving additional proper citation.

Type 5: Self-Plagiarism

When you use a paper or assignment completed for one class to satisfy the assignment for a different class.  Even if you modify a previous paper or assignment, you must get permission from your professor/ instructor and correctly cite your previous paper.

Plagiarism Detection Tools

Plagiarism checkers- there are free and paid sites out there. Look at their EUAs (End User Agreements). Below are a few examples:

Plagiarism in the profession

Along with Otterbein's judicial code, the following examples highlight examples of plagiarism.