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Polio, Charlene; Shi, Ling – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2012
Perceptions and judgments on plagiarism or acceptable use of source texts are contingent on one's interpretations and experiences in reading and writing academic texts in a specific disciplinary context. The lack of consensus on what is acceptable textual appropriation in student writing has led to the scholarship on perceptions of textual…
Descriptors: Translation, Second Language Learning, Plagiarism, Academic Discourse
Shi, Ling – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2012
The present study is based on interviews with 48 students and 27 instructors in a North American university and explores whether students and professors across faculties share the same views on the use of paraphrased, summarized, and translated texts in four examples of L2 student writing. Participants' comments centered on whether the paraphrases…
Descriptors: North Americans, English for Academic Purposes, Second Language Learning, Writing (Composition)
Shi, Ling – Research in the Teaching of English, 2011
The present study is based on interviews of students (n = 48) and instructors (n = 27) from various disciplines in a North American research university and explores participants' comments on examples of some students' unacknowledged texts appropriated and drawn from published sources, classroom learning, or unidentified prior reading. Although…
Descriptors: Research Universities, College Students, Student Attitudes, Cultural Background
Shi, Ling – Language Awareness, 2006
This study examines interviews with 46 undergraduates to explore if participants with differing language and cultural backgrounds view plagiarism or textual appropriation primarily as a) a language problem because of a lack of words of one's own, or b) a cultural challenge as a result of either some first language (L1) cultural training to…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, English (Second Language), Undergraduate Students, Cultural Differences