Penn State’s student newspaper The Daily Collegian,
suspended a writer for plagiarizing and fabricating quotes by Sue
Paterno, the widow of former coach Joe Paterno. This was the paper’s second
plagiarism case this year.
In September, Arizona State University’s State Press and Columbia University’s Daily Spectator both revealed that their
students had plagiarized.
Problems include:
Taking information from another source, which may have plagiarized the information.
Relying heavily on source material rather than getting the information first-hand.
Quoting what a person says on TV.
Some
colleges are requiring their student newspaper’s reporters to provide sourcing
notes with their stories and then send out the story to the sources quoted asking if the quotes are accurate.
Some
train their reporters about plagiarism, although plagiarized quotes were in
stories written by reporters who had been trained.
Some
use plagiarism-detecting software to see if identical or similar wording is
used elsewhere on the Internet.
The
author suggests that some of these tactics might be used in mainstream
newsrooms, too. Plagiarized stories appeared in NPR, The Wall Street Journal, Wired,
Time, CNN and The Boston Globe.
To read
the full story, click on http://www.poynter.org/how-tos/journalism-education/190754/10-ways-to-prevent-plagiarism-fabrication-at-college-newspapers-and-in-any-newsroom/
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