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Post by Layce on May 16, 2016 11:52:57 GMT
"That's called plagarism." First of all, it's PLAGIARISM. You keep misspelling it. It is possible that you do not know what you are talking about.
It is also possible that this is dealing with a double standard.. one for students, another for teaching professionals. And that should be exposed.
Take your findings to the administration once you're in the clear.
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Post by anxiousmom on May 16, 2016 12:11:04 GMT
Yes, even in a lecture you must say that this information is from Dr. X professor at the University of Florida or wherever it came from. Brief change of subject: Go Gators!!
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scrapaddie
Drama Llama
Posts: 5,090
Jul 8, 2014 20:17:31 GMT
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Post by scrapaddie on May 16, 2016 14:06:28 GMT
Do you know that your professor plagarized? Maybe he was plagarized by someone at the other university All I know is that it raised my eyebrow. It isn't just unreferenced material, it cut and paste, word for word. Neither professor has referenced the other. I've read the online CV of the professor from my course which includes research and collaborations and she has never mentioned the other professor at all in 25 years or any work with that university. I've worked in academia, directly with a professor for 6 years. I understand that they collaborate and attend conferences. I know that he would frown upon direct word-for-word cut and paste. Anyway, I've done nothing, I'm doing nothing but like I said, it raised my eyebrow. Understood. High school student know better. It's just a little easier to associate blame with a high school student!
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flute4peace
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,757
Jul 3, 2014 14:38:35 GMT
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Post by flute4peace on May 16, 2016 16:15:52 GMT
Am I understanding correctly that both professors claim the copyright on the passage? If so, it would indeed give me pause.
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Post by annaintx on May 16, 2016 18:19:01 GMT
I work in a large state university. Many of my colleagues don't put every.single.paper or conference they attend on their CVs, especially when there are too many to mention.
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Deleted
Posts: 0
May 17, 2024 23:15:14 GMT
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Post by Deleted on May 16, 2016 19:06:06 GMT
It sounds like there are a lot of reasonable suggestions. And no I wouldn't expect you to absolutely know that your prof doesn't know or have permission to use the information. I wouldn't be too quick to accuse or assume honestly. You just never know who knows who.
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Post by Karmady on May 16, 2016 20:16:45 GMT
Am I understanding correctly that both professors claim the copyright on the passage? If so, it would indeed give me pause. YES!!! exactly. You get it. That's why the pause.
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AmeliaBloomer
Drama Llama
Posts: 6,842
Location: USA
Jun 26, 2014 5:01:45 GMT
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Post by AmeliaBloomer on May 16, 2016 22:02:47 GMT
Am I understanding correctly that both professors claim the copyright on the passage? If so, it would indeed give me pause. YES!!! exactly. You get it. That's why the pause. Okay, we get it! Now do YOU get that you can't assume that your prof is the plagiarism perp and the other prof is the victim? Your argument was that your prof must be at fault because the material from your online class is not available to the public. Some of us are countering that IF your prof is the original author, he could have shared it with others in the field. One of those others could have claimed authorship. We're just not as sure of the provenance of the material as you are.
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