DocumentCode
900153
Title
Plagiarism, Graduate Education, and Information Security
Author
Ryan, Julie J C H
Author_Institution
George Washington Univ., Washington
Volume
5
Issue
5
fYear
2007
Firstpage
62
Lastpage
65
Abstract
Plagiarism in the classroom has changed since the period of 1997 to 2002, during which the author saw predominately word-for-word plagiarism in papers in his classes. Some came from single sources, but more often they came from two or more. With that kind of plagiarism, it was fairly easy, although time-consuming, to detect copying. Most students engaging in such behaviors believed their professors knew little about the World Wide Web, and many believed that few, if any, professors spent the time needed to check for plagiarism. The development of widely available plagiarism-detection tools also helped raise awareness and make it easier to check papers against online sources.
Keywords
Internet; computer aided instruction; computer crime; computer science education; educational courses; World Wide Web; computer science education; copying detection; information security course; online source; plagiarism-detection tool; word-for-word plagiarism; Computer science education; Information security; Internet; Milling machines; Paper mills; Plagiarism; Read only memory; Student activities; Web sites; World Wide Web; education; ethics; information management; plagiarism;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Security & Privacy, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1540-7993
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MSP.2007.119
Filename
4336281
Link To Document