Download Student Activity Sheet(s) for printout in PDF Format
Overview
Students learn that, although the Internet makes it very easy, copying others'
work and presenting it as one's own is unethical. They also learn about
circumstances in which it is permissible to copy others' work.
Objectives
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Define plagiarism and describe its consequences |
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Explain how the Internet makes copying others' work easy |
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Identify conditions that make copying acceptable |
ISTE® National Technology Standards
Site Preview
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No Internet site is used in this lesson. |
Online Resources
Materials
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Activity sheets (2) |
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Printer access |
   
Introduce
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Have students each write a brief paragraph on the same subject.
Collect the paragraphs and give each student someone else's work. |
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Invite volunteers to read the paragraphs, pretending that it is
their own work. Praise them for "their" work and say that you would
like to publish "their" work in a parent newsletter or submit it to
a writing contest. |
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Invite both the true owner and the person pretending the work is
theirs to comment on how the situation makes them feel. |
Teach 1
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Distribute Activity Sheet 1. |
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Have students work in pairs to complete the sheet. NOTE: Postpone
discussion until students have read the information on Activity Sheet
2. |
Teach 2
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Distribute Activity Sheet 2. |
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Share with students your school's official policy on plagiarism
and its consequences. If there is no official policy, explain how
you handle plagiarism in your classroom. |
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NOTE: Copyright laws protect the ownership of authors' written
works, photos, drawings, and other graphics by requiring that people
who make copies do so only with permission of the owner. However,
use of such works for schoolwork is considered "fair use" and does
not require permission, only that credit be given. |
Teach 3
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Have students revisit Activity Sheet 1 and discuss changes or additions
to their answers. Guide students to consider the following in their
discussion:
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David's homework: E-mail makes it easy
for students to share their work. However, unless the teacher
tells them to work together, s/he expects David's work to be
his own. Even though Justin gave David permission to copy his
work, it is still plagiarism.
Manny's paragraph: Copying someone's
work from the Web in his own handwriting does not make it Manny's
work. This is plagiarism.
Samantha's work: Using the exact words
of someone else is plagiarism-even if you add your own topic
sentence. Samantha should restate the passage in her own words.
Marybeth and the drawing: It is okay
to print a drawing from a Web site for a school report as long
as credit is given to the person who made it or the site from
which it came. |
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Close
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Ask: What is plagiarism? |
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Ask: How does the Internet
make copying others' work easy? |
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Ask: When is copying others'
work for a school report okay? |
   
Extend (online)
The following activity can be added for students who completed this lesson
in a previous grade.
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Have students print a passage from a Web page, read it, put it
aside, and write the information in their own words. Then have them
compare their version to the original passage. Discuss how they differ. |
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