Seminar in Ethics and
Academic Integrity, University of Colorado at Boulder
Are Any of These
Plagiarizing?*
Prepared by: Jeffrey T.
Luftig, Ph.D. Leeds School of Business
1. Asking a friend to suggest changes or corrections in your essay.
2. Asking a friend to re-write your essay.
3. Asking a friend to search the Internet for sources you can use in
writing a term paper.
4. Asking a friend to help you search the Internet for sources you can
use in writing a term paper.
5. Reading someone else’s term paper and then writing your own using
some of his/her ideas and copying part or all of his/her bibliography.
6. Listing books in your bibliography that you never read or used.
7. Brainstorming an assignment with other students and then each
writing your own report.
8. Taking a term paper you wrote for one class and rewriting it for
another class.
9. Taking a term paper you wrote for one class and turning it in for
another class without rewriting it.
10. Copying a paragraph or excerpt from an Internet site without citing
it, but identifying the source as one of your references in your
bibliography..
11. Using a file of old papers to turn in a paper under your name.
12. Writing a paper with other students and then each person rewriting
their own papers to make them just a little bit different.
13. Turning in a term paper purchased and downloaded from an Internet
source.
14. Turning in a term paper downloaded from an Internet source, but
obtained for free.
15. Hiring a tutor to help you learn to write better.
16. Hiring a tutor to help you rewrite your papers.
17. Hiring a tutor to rewrite your papers.
18. Using a portion of someone else’s computer program to write your
own assigned program.
*Predominantly based on, and used with permission from Student Cheating
and Plagiarism in the Internet Era: a Wake-Up Call by Ann Lathrop and
Kathleen Foss. Englewood, CO: Libraries Unlimited
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Last Modified September 9,
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