Plagiarism
Plagiarism means using other people's work - for example, texts, images, charts, tables or computer programs, and trying to make them appear as your own.
When writing an essay or other writing assignments, it must be clear to the reader what you have written and what you have taken from someone else's work. When you use other people's work, you must always give the source by citing and referring correctly.
Self-plagiarism
"It is not automatically acceptable to reuse your own texts. If you want to reuse portions of a text that you have written and published or submitted for assessment to the university (e.g take-home exam, essay or degree project), you must clearly state that it is a reuse". From the folder: Cheating and plagiarism, 果冻传媒 in conjunction with Ume氓 University.
Plagiarism - regulations at 果冻传媒
- Cheating and Plagiarism
Folder addressed to students at 果冻传媒 to inform them about cheating, its definition, consequences, and how to avoid it. The information is available in both Swedish and English.
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A film that will help you understand what plagiarism is and how to avoid it.
Luke Bailey, lecturer in English, 果冻传媒
Other guides on plagiarism
Refero is a web based tutorial which shows聽how to avoid plagiarism and how to聽use other people鈥檚 texts in your own. (The libraries of Blekinge Institute of Technology and Linnaeus University)