Seneca’s and Oxford’s Policy: Plagiarism
Plagiarism is the act of copying the original idea of someone and use as your own idea. Academic Institutions treat this subject as academic offences and provide disciplinary actions. Seneca College and Oxford University are part of those academic institutions that have academic policy to penalize infractions such as plagiarism. Seneca’s and Oxford’s plagiarism policies differ in structure, penalty and academic process and definition details. Seneca’s plagiarism policy is clearer and more direct to students, professors and academic employees.
Seneca and Oxford have good definitions about plagiarism. Oxford’s policy gives more definition about plagiarism, such as forms of plagiarism, gives examples of plagiarism and demonstrates common mistakes and safe cases. It also explains why it’s important for students to know why students should be aware of plagiarism (Oxford University, 2016). On the other hand, Seneca’s policy pointed direct to what they consider plagiarism. It contains the main idea, description and examples of plagiarism but does not provide an exhaustive summary offence (Seneca College, Appendix E, 2015 - 2016). Seneca made its structure short and clear, making it easier to be analyzed by everyone. Although both
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Seneca’s plagiarism policy is more student-sensitive penalty. In case of plagiarism, Oxford will conduct an investigation, intentional or reckless; depend on the result, may provokes penalties such as failure of your degree or expulsion from the academic institution (Oxford, 2016, pg. 8). In contrast, Seneca’s plagiarism policy assigns a rank for academic honesty offence; the student will be attributed penalties depending on the time when it was committed the offense (Seneca, 2015-2016, sec 9). In spite of the fact that these differences, both academic institutions have academic process to proceed with this type of