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Anyone ever recycle any assignments?
Not as in submit the same essay twice, but say you did a giant chunk of research for something unrelated--then for another course you can just barely fit it in to make sense in the context of your new project, but you make it work?
I just saved myself 6 hours or so, its what I love about presentations sometimes, when youre presenting verbally you can get away with so much more bullshitting than in essays
I just saved myself 6 hours or so, its what I love about presentations sometimes, when youre presenting verbally you can get away with so much more bullshitting than in essays
Comments
I sometimes use the same sources. For example, text books from 100 level crim courses.
If that was bad, AC/DC would be on Death Row. :p
You can't just take what people tell you and digest it, without even examining the concepts on which the notion of plagiarism is based :thumbs_down:
According to the dictionary, any act of plagiarization is an act in which one takes another's work--either by directly copying it and not acknowledging it or by closely imitating it--and tries to pass it off as one's own. Hence, we see that a necessary condition for plagiarism or plagiarization is the presence of another party (or at least two separate parties) :secret:
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/plagiarization
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/plagiarism
Now, how does copying from yourself or taking your own work and using it in another class amount to plagiarism? Just because a professor tells you it's plagiarism, won't necessarily mean that that is so. You ought to think on your own instead of believing everything people tell you and being so credulous :angry:
But hey, if you're so righteous and want to play by the rules (and make life harder for yourself), who am I to tell you what's what?
It is due to the academic standards we have at this glorious university. If by using a piece of work you have previously submitted in the past, then it is plagiarism.
As for me, I rarely have to write essays so it's not like it is a burden to me to write one.
edit: Fogerty won the case. The judge decided it was impossible for artists to plagiarize themselves.
So there you go. It's legal in music... possibly not in academics.
OMG IM SUING YOU BECAUSE YOU WROTE A SONG!!!
As an example, Ravi Batra and Paul Krugman have both re-used portions of their books and/or newspaper articles in subsequent writings and this usage is as far as I can tell quite legitimate. (Batra even goes the extra mile and cites himself on the few times he re-uses substantial portions of previous work, heehee. :tongue: )
I personally just modify my old work for the better so that it's not the exact original and then submit it.
http://www.sfu.ca/policies/teaching/t10-02.htm
Specifically Section 3.0b
I will quote it here if you are too lazy to open that link :P
If I were to argue this in front of a neutral arbiter, I know I'd win (not to sound arrogant or anything, it's just that university policies have no logical basis). But since we can't question the university's policies, I wouldn't stand a chance arguing this in front of the senate.
And I could tell you right now that you could find as many neutral arbiter you like, the university policies would win every.single.time.
It's actually quite easy to do because I'm in communication, but it ends up coming out the same way anyway, so meh.
If a government makes laws and you are in their country or territories, it does not matter if you agree with them or think they are logical, you still have to abide by them and no judge will say, "well that law doesn't make sense or is logically based and fair". They are laws and you have to abide by them. If you don't like them then you can go elsewhere.