Plagiarism in High School
Plagiarism in High School
Academic honesty is essential in developing the core values necessary to fulfill our mission of
developing servant leaders. Such moral integrity is just as important as our scholars’ academic
development. Academic dishonesty includes both cheating and plagiarism. Cheating is using
the knowledge or work of any other person to answer questions or complete assignments that
are to represent the scholar’s own knowledge or effort, i.e. copying from another’s test. It is also
using one’s own efforts in ways prohibited by the teacher (i.e. using a book to answer questions
on a closed book assignment.)
Plagiarism is representing the ideas, words, or work of another as if they were their own. This
does not mean that a scholar cannot use other person’s ideas or work in their papers. Rather it
means that scholars must properly give credit when using ideas, words, or work of another
person. One does this by properly citing sources from which they borrow other’s words, work, or ideas. When citing sources, scholars are to follow the format required by the teacher of their
class.
Written assignments are to be completed after the recommended readings. If papers are to be
a summary of an individual book assigned, then the scholar must simply note at the end of their
paper that their source was from a specific book. If ideas have come from any other source, or
from a combination of sources, whether book, periodical, or the internet, the scholar must
properly document each and every source used, through the use of footnotes, endnotes, or intext citations, whether directly quoted, or paraphrased. Scholars will include a bibliography or
list of works cited as per the direction of their teacher.
Failure to do so will result in an “F” grade for the assignment. The second incident will result in
an “F” grade for the semester. Further, if plagiarized work is submitted in more than one class,
the scholar may be asked to appear