Deterring
Plagiarism in an Online Course
Professor David Hennessy
As we all know, the Internet now makes it easy to find
thousands of relevant sources in seconds, and in the space of a
short time plagiarists can find, copy, and paste together a term
paper, article, or even a book. Because the material online is produced
by writers of varying levels of quality and professionalism, it
is often difficult or impossible for educators and editors to identify
plagiarism.
Professor
David Hennessy, in his fully online American Literature-Colonial
to 1900 (AML 2010) course, has championed the use of a product called
Turnitin, an Internet-based plagiarism detection service, to deter
and detect plagiarized papers.
The software is available free of charge for any BC faculty member
and is part of a ""Powerlink" within their Blackboard
course shell.
Professor
Hennessy has an excellent organization schema set up for students.
Instead of students submitting their paper assignments through the
traditional Assignment Link in Course Tools. Students access the
assignments form a folder on the Course Home Page:

Once students open the Assignment Folder, they can
select the paper that they want to submit for grading:

(Image
Only - No Links)
The
submission process allows the student to upload the paper in a manner
very similar to the process they would normally use in their Blackboard
course shell. This interface allows the Turnitin software to review
the paper for possible plagiarism:
(click
on image for larger view)
After
the paper has been reviewed by Turnitin, Professor Hennessy can
view a report which red flags portions of the paper as being plagiarized.
(click
on image for larger view)
Professor
Hennessy says that it takes about 10 minutes to set up Turnitin
for his courses through a WebCT Powerlink. Does it work? He states:
"Before I started using Turnitin, I was receiving from students
about 3 plagiarized papers per class. Now that I am using Turnitin,
I have about 3 plagiarized papers per term."
And
just as important as the service that Turnitin provides, Professor
Hennessy says that Turnitin acts as a major deterrent just because
it is there.
For
more information about Turnitin, contact Professor David Hennessy
at x6293 or email him at dhenness@broward.edu
Instructional
Technology
Broward College,
Central Campus, Building 17, Room 226
3501 S.W. Davie Road,
Davie, FL 33314
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