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Whenever you include another person's information or wording in
a document, you must acknowledge the source and include a citation
that will tell the reader where you obtained it. If you do not do
so, you deprive your reader of the ability to locate information
that he or she might want to explore further. In addition, you may
be committing intellectual theft, plagiarism.
Mechanisms that allow
a reader to verify the information presented in a document are essential
parts of most types of technical and scientific writing. Procedures
sections of technical and laboratory reports, for example, provide
the reader with information sufficient to replicate both the method
and the data described in the document.
There are two basic and
universal rules regarding the use of information in professional
and, especially, academic writing:
- If you use the language
of your source, you must quote it exactly, enclose it in quotation
marks, and cite the source.
- If you use ideas or
information that are not common knowledge, you must cite the source.
-The Mayfield Handbook
of Technical and Scientific Writing.
The following off-site
Web pages offer information and help on avoiding plagiarism.
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