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Journalism: Academic Integrity

This guide is designed to assist students locate resources in order to conduct research for journalistic articles

2023-2024 Academic Integrity and Procedures Regarding Violations of Code and Academic Integrity

Academic Integrity at Manhattanville

Academic Integrity Word Cloud

Understanding and Avoiding Plagiarism

Why is Citation Important?

Academic Integrity and Academic Dishonesty

This video provides information on Academic Integrity as it applies to the Manhattanville University Academic Integrity Policy.

Am I Plagiarizing? (Easybib)

This infographic flowchart,describes how you can determine if you’re plagiarizing by graphically representing different scenarios

Plagiarism Defined

 "To steal and pass off (the ideas or words of another) as one's own : use (another's production) without crediting the source. To commit literary theft : present as new and original an idea or product derived from an existing source" - Webster's Dictonary  

 Bart Simpson writing with chalk on blackboard:: I will not plagiarize 

Credit:"Plagiarism." Microsoft  Word 2010 Clip Art. 

Whenever you quote, paraphrase, or summarize a source, you will need to use proper bibliographic citation using in-text citation (MLA or APA citation) or footnotes (Chicago).