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Language, technology and the law : anti-plagiarism software and students' academic writing

conference contribution
posted on 2005-01-01, 00:00 authored by Wendy Sutherland-SmithWendy Sutherland-Smith, R Carr
Plagiarism is of grave concern for academic institutions in the twenty-first
century. Institutions utilise plagiarism policies, honour codes and regulations to ensure students develop a sense of educational integrity. Technology has recently afforded new methods for staff to detect plagiarism – through antiplagiarism software. This paper explores perspectives of seven teachers across five faculties to Turnitin.com (an anti-plagiarism software package) at a large Australian university. The findings indicate that software such as Turnitin.com may assist in the quest to detect text-matching, and perhaps reduce plagiarism. It should not, however, be considered the panacea for plagiarism. Plagiarism policies should also reflect cognisance of the existence of a 'plagiarism continuum' (Sutherland-Smith, 2003) through the use of technology. This research highlights the broader need for institutions to reformulate plagiarism policies in light of cross-cultural perspectives of authorship and attribution of text.

History

Event

International Conference on Arts and Humanities (3rd : 2005 : Honolulu, T.H.)

Pagination

1 - 19

Publisher

Hawaii International Conference on Arts and Humanities

Location

Honolulu, T.H.

Place of publication

Honolulu, T.H.

Start date

2005-01-13

End date

2005-01-16

ISSN

1541-5899

Language

eng

Publication classification

E2.1 Full written paper - non-refereed / Abstract reviewed

Title of proceedings

3rd annual Hawaii international conference on arts & humanities : 2005 conference proceedings

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