An investigation into the attitudes of academic librarians towards Internet plagiarism of HE students.

Authors

  • Rebecca Bartlett
  • Biddy Casselden

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29173/lirg255

Keywords:

plagiarism, information literacy

Abstract

This paper aims to report an investigation into the attitudes of academic librarians towards Internet plagiarism by higher education students, particularly, how they define Internet plagiarism, their perceived role in combating this phenomenon, and the skills and techniques they have or will adopt to achieve this. A Delphi study was undertaken using a sample of 10 respondents. The responses demonstrated that plagiarism is a multifaceted term and not easily definable, however respondents were unanimous in their opinion that the Internet has made it easier to plagiarise. The potential for active collaboration between librarians and academics to jointly address Internet plagiarism was seen as vital by all respondents, although opinion was divided on the role of librarians and academics. A blended approach is recommended, which involves involving policing and prevention; in addition to ensuring that students are achieving information literacy well before they reach the gates of the University.

Author Biographies

Rebecca Bartlett

Parliamentary Information Officer at the Scottish Parliament

Biddy Casselden

Senior Lecturer/Programme Leader for the MA/MSc Information and Library Management by Distance Learning, School of Computing, Engineering and Information Sciences, Northumbria UnIversity

Downloads

Published

2011-08-07

Issue

Section

Refereed Research Articles