This site gives lots of links under the following headings:
Plagiarism and the internet
Plagiarism in schools
General resources on Plagiarism
Helping students avoid Plagiarism
Papermills and Plagiarism detection
Teaching about Plagiarism
Plagiarism.org offers printable handouts on Plagiarism, proper citation, and paper writing. Plagiarism.org/resources/student-materials -- From AASL Tip of the Day
Comparison study of 26 services: Five systems -- TurnItIn, PlagAware, Ephorus, PlagScan and Urkund -- detected about 70% to 63% of the plagiarism in five test papers uniformly submitted, a "C-" grade in the German University system, Weber-Wulff says, awarding them a "partially useful" score, top honors among the services. Others did even worse, including at least one system that may be a front for helping cheaters evade the popular TurnItIn system.
In this technological age a plagiarism checker is essential for protecting your written work. A plagiarism checker benefits teachers, students, website owners and anyone else interested in protecting their writing. Our service guarantees that anything you write can be thoroughly checked by our plagiarism software to insure that your texts are unique.
"To help you answer these questions, The Copyright Alliance, as part of its educational mission, has assembled a valuable array of classroom curricula and other teaching resources on its website, www.CopyrightAlliance.org.
"In addition, the Alliance has partnered with the award-winning curriculum experts at Young Minds Inspired (YMI) to develop this comprehensive Educator's Guide to Copyright, which includes:
"* An overview that defines copyright, traces its history, and clarifies the issues of fair use and plagiarism in the classroom (pages 2-3).
"* A FAQ section that will answer some general copyright questions as well as questions that arise in the classroom (pages 4-5).
"* A glossary designed to keep you abreast of the language of copyright and computers (page 6). * Standards charts for all the educational materials available on the Alliance website to
help you integrate these resources into your curriculum (pages 7-13)"
It is the responsibility of all educators to model good digital citizenship for their students. Especially when it comes to copyright, plagiarism and intellectual property. The waters are murky. Great resource from Silvia Tolisano AKA @langwitches
It is the responsibility of all educators to model good digital citizenship for their students. Especially when it comes to copyright, plagiarism and intellectual property. The waters are murky. Great resource from Silvia Tolisano AKA @langwitches
Thanks to Dennis for this scoop!
Dennis T OConnor's insight:
The University of Florida developed three Flash games for their 'Gaming Against Plagiarism' project.