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Turnitin: Fighting Plagiarism and Saving Time at Fresno State
3/14/2007
By Linda L Briggs
The plagiarism prevention software called
Turnitin from iParadigms LLC, is known for its ability to detect illicit copying; the company says its site now receives some 120,000 papers for review a day. Less well known are additional features that Turnitin has added to its product set that make paper grading and management far easier.
Turnitin’s GradeMark feature, available as an add-on to the original product, can be used to collect student papers electronically, edit them online by inserting electronic comments into the document, then return them electronically to students, all without ever printing a page.
“It’s just a wonderful way to collect papers,” according to Ray Hall, a physics professor at California State University at Fresno, who also teaches courses in critical thinking that have several writing assignments. “I can’t lose student work; staples don’t come off.” Just the fact that Turnitin date-stamps and alphabetizes the collected papers is a huge time-saver, Hall said.
CSU Fresno has a campus-wide license for Turnitin’s anti-plagiarism tool, which Hall said he finds useful for routinely making sure students are turning in original work. When an instructor is using the product to check for plagiarism, students submit their papers electronically through Turnitin, which compares every paper to a set of databases made up of the contents of the Internet, a collection of original work such as books, and all previous papers submitted in the past to Turnitin. A resulting “originality report” highlights questionable areas in each paper.
In addition, Hall, who has been using Turnitin for several years, pays extra for a feature called GradeMark, which collects papers electronically and helps manage them. Since his students are already required to turn in papers online through Turnitin in order to submit them to the originality checker, it’s a logical addition to the product’s features.
“One thing I like about having students turn in papers online is [that] I get a real date stamp on it automatically that tells me when it was turned in.” Since it’s a university requirement at CSU Fresno that each student have access to a computer, Internet access isn’t an issue.
His students can submit papers to Turnitin in two ways: either directly through the company’s website or through the university’s Blackboard course management system. Hall said he finds the Blackboard interface cumbersome and prefers a standalone Web page he has created that lists assignments and allows students to link to the Turnitin website directly.
Using GradeMark, Hall has gradually moved to a completely electronic grading process that no longer involves paper at all. “I was going to the site, downloading the papers, and printing them out myself [to edit]. But that kills trees and so forth.” Instead, he now uses GradeMark to mark up and assign a grade to papers electronically, then return them to students as an electronic document.
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