Campus Journalism PowerPoint presentation which discusses about the campus paper
Size: 14.49 MB
Language: en
Added: Sep 09, 2024
Slides: 12 pages
Slide Content
PRAYER
, PLAGIARISM
What is Plagiarism?
Plagiarism = stealing Plagiarism Taking credit for phrases, sentences, paragraphs or even an entire story that someone else created . This is true whether you do it intentionally or inadvertently.
EXAMPLE Plagiarism Taking a quote from another news story without attributing it . Deliberately copying work from another student or copying and pasting from the internet; Submitting a paper or assignment that you bought online . Using any source or image in your assignment without citing it properly .
EXAMPLE Plagiarism Misquoting or not including quotation marks (" ") around exact quotations. Re-using your own past work (self-plagiarism ). Collaborating with other students on assignments that are meant to be individual (group or team plagiarism ).
The Core Principles of Journalism & Plagiarism Risks Plagiarism truthfulness, being accurate, staying objective, unbiased/fair, remembering about public accountability.
Self-plagiarism in Journalism with Examples Plagiarism Jayson Blair, a promising reporter for the New York Times, became synonymous with plagiarism in journalism in 2003 36 out of 73 articles
Self-plagiarism in Journalism with Examples Plagiarism Jack Kelley of the USA Today Nada Behziz , a reporter at The Bakersfield Californian, was fired in 2005 when her editors discovered plagiarism in her articles, including one case where a quotation was copied from a 1995 story.
Plagiarism “without a moral constituent, it’s not possible to keep things unique because it’s the attitude that matters and the honesty that a person strives for !”