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IAT222 D100 Plagiarism - Self-Check

Multiple choice

It is your first term at SFU and you have to write a ten page final paper for your History course. You find yourself pushed for time as you juggle completing your paper, studying for your final exams, and completing your volunteer work at your local charity. As you write the outline for your paper, you cut and paste sections from the internet that you find will be helpful in supporting your thesis statement. As you finish your papers, you realize that you have forgotten where you got the information from. Since your paper is due, you do your best to cite what you can remember but do not make mention of all the sources you used when you submit the paper. Is this considered plagiarism, even though you did cite some of your sources?

Options
A.Yes
B.No
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Step-by-Step Analysis
The scenario centers on drafting a ten-page final history paper while time-pressed, with portions copied from the internet to support the thesis and later forgetting exact sources. This sets the stage for an important distinction in academic integrity. Option 1: Yes. The essence of plagiarism here is that material was copied from other sources without proper attribution. Even though some sources were cited, failing to cite all sources or......Login to view full explanation

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