My SmartBlog on Education article from 11.04.14
I do not enjoy being the plagiarism police with my middle school students. For me, detecting plagiarism and determining consequences take more energy than investing time into proactively planning assignments that don’t lend themselves to copying.
Here are some steps I take and recommend to try to prevent plagiarism before it begins. I won’t claim that these will make the assignment plagiarism proof, but they will certainly make it more difficult.
- Discuss the idea of plagiarism on a personal level. Have a conversation about how annoying it is when someone copies them on a superficial level such as hairstyle, clothing, catchphrases, etc. Then, take it to a deeper level and discuss how they would feel if someone stole the product of their hard labor. Perhaps even share some current plagiarism scandals in the news.
- Explicitly teach the skills of paraphrasing and summarizing. It is not enough to tell students to “put it in your own words” or “don’t copy” because many don’t know what else to do. It doesn’t have to be boring. For example, they enjoy when I challenge them to take a couple of paragraphs of text and summarize them in exactly 12 words.
- Incorporate some form of collaboration, discussion, and feedback into the project. Also, add the element of publicly sharing their work in on online format. These encourage students to produce original work due to the social pressure of their work being read by more than just the teacher.
- Add a personal reflection component—either within the assignment itself, or thinking back on the process of completing the work.
- Connect the assignment to something you have specifically done in class. Incorporate a news article they read, a video clip you showed, or a class discussion into the final product.
- Break the assignment into chunks and have required check-ins regularly. Some students copy because they waited until the last minute and are rushing.
- Conference with the student throughout the process. This will allow you to determine to what extent they are understanding their topic. For instance, you could ask them what surprised them most from their research thus far. In addition, some part of the assignment should be completed in class with teacher supervision.
- Designate one specific source they must use (ideally a current one).
- Add a piece that cannot be copied. For example, students could interview an expert or design an oral presentation.
- Most importantly, design assignments utilizing higher-order thinking skills and creativity. When students are required to explain, problem solve, evaluate, hypothesize, or compare, it is nearly impossible for them to find this kind of assignment online from which to borrow. To illustrate: rather than writing a biography of a president (a sure recipe for plagiarism), have them write a mock letter to the post office or the White House persuading the officials to designate a new stamp or holiday to be held in that president’s honor due to his many accomplishments.
http://smartblogs.com/education/2014/11/03/plagiarism-an-ounce-of-prevention/
image courtesy of: freedigitalphotos.net
Nice one Cheryl! Very clever. I always thought how it would work now that kids have access to Wikipedia and copy paste functions. You gave great answers. I also really liked your first assignment dedicated to parents. That’s wonderful and beautiful.
I’m a mom of 2 very young kids and keep thinking about how they can learn in a more fun way than what I experienced myself back in the day while still understanding the value of hard work, precision and perfection. Let me keep reading, looks like you’ve got that covered…
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