Rank: Forum user
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Hi there I am in the process of doing the IPD Open Assessment Part B exam and I'm wondering what would be an acceptable way to reference case law? My plagiarism scanner has been going crazy over it as well as flagging up health and safety regulations and legal terminology. Does anyone know how strict the examiners are regarding this sort of thing?
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Rank: Super forum user
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Plagiarism means different things in different subjects. If you are doing a creative writing course and just copy chunks of someone else work and pass it off as your own, then that is clearly plagiarism. In H&S we are less interested in original ideas and more interested in demonstrating what you know and that you can apply it in real life scenarios. Inevitably you will end up quoting the law, guidance and perhaps, academic papers. As long as you make it clear what your sources are then this should not be an issue. The concern is more to do with either collusion or simply copying some else work. See https://www.nebosh.org.uk/open-book-examinations/plagiarism-and-collusion/ for how NEBOSH deals with this. There are loads of guides often from Universities describing how to do references to other people’s work. Edited by user 17 February 2021 13:14:50(UTC)
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1 user thanked A Kurdziel for this useful post.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Hi Powerman To add to AK's sound advice: If you are referencing case law, it is almost inevitable that you will have to quote from it to explain your understanding of the judgment(s). So, I suppose over the last 25 years there was been one case I have referenced more than any other (more often even than the case law on "reasonably practicable" or its more stringent cousin). It talks about work that is "ancillary to, but necessary for". It would be impossible to adequately explain the relevance of the judgment without quoting those five words. Then the art is to explain the importance of those five words in the context of why you are referring to the case law. So quoting from the case law and showing that you are quoting by using quotation marks is NOT plagiarism, whatever your program may think! A gold star if you can identify the case law that I referenced and explain its relevance in the current legislative climate [though this riddle is perhaps much more easy than it may sound] !!!
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2 users thanked peter gotch for this useful post.
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Rank: New forum user
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Hey, maybe try to paraphrase them instead of quoting? It always works in my case.
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1 user thanked earlrobinson for this useful post.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Quoting is not plagiarism, which seems to be an issue with some of this software that people use. Passing off your work as somebody else’s is. Do not paraphrase legalisation: the exact interpretation of the law depends on reading it as it is written. Do not paraphrase judgements-again the legal meaning is in what has been written down by the judge. You can summarise but you have to make it clear, that is what you are doing.
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1 user thanked A Kurdziel for this useful post.
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Rank: Forum user
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I've had to paraphrase the case descriptions and made sure that the cases were referenced correctly. I've avoided directly quoting judgments in case it flagged up. I did however quote acts and regulations. I have however taken Peter Gotch's advice to use quotation marks for certain words. Although I quote certain sentences every day but it's a different story when you have to write a concise account that'll be scrutinised by examiners.
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Rank: Super forum user
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This might sound like a stupid question but why are you even running a plagiarism scanner over your work? You are not intending to plagiarise anything and you have no idea what, if any, system the examiners are using.
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1 user thanked A Kurdziel for this useful post.
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Rank: Super forum user
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The general rule is that it is ok to quote things, as long as it is clearly indicated as a quote, and a reference is supplied, and the amount of quoted material is small compared to the word count of your answer (otherwise it's not your answer is it?).
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