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Fain, Margaret, and Bates, Peggy. Cheating 101: Paper Mills and You. November 4, 2004.
The authors describe the current state of cheating, Internet paper mills, ways to combat cheating, and plagiarism detection sites.
Fain, Margaret, and Bates, Peggy. Cheating 101: Detecting Plagiarized Papers. November 4, 2004.
The authors provide a list of 21 clues that a paper could be plagiarized.
Fain, Margaret, and Bates, Peggy. Easy Steps to Combating Plagiarism. November 4, 2004.
The authors explain seven steps an instructor can take to combat plagiarism
Fister, Barbara. "Fear of Reference." The Chronicle of Higher Education 48.40 (2002): B20.
Fister describes why students "why they thought some students were reluctant to use our library's reference desk." She then tells how professors can design assignments to encourage students to use the library.
Forsyth, D. R., W. R. Pope, and J. H. McMillan. "Students' Reactions After Cheating: An Attribution Analysis." Contemporary Educational Research 10 (1985): 72-82.
Franklin-Stokes, A., and S. E. Newstead. "Cheating: Who Does It and Why?" Studies in Higher Education 20 (1995): 159-72.
Freedman, Morris. "The Persistence of Plagiarism, the Riddle of Originality." Virginia Quarterly Review 70.3 (1994): 504+.
Freeman traces the development of the modern idea of originality and plagiarism. (The full text of this article is available through Academic Search Elite.)
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