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A friend helped me with a presentation – plagiarism or not?


How to reduce student plagiarism?I didn't acknowledge someone who helped with my thesis, is this considered plagiarism?Plagiarism of Lecture SlidesPlagiarizing ProfessorFriend's Involvement in PlagiarismHelp me understand plagiarism concerning computer programmingConditions valid for plagiarism and dishonestyGot accused of plagiarism due to a reference lost during copying my own writingLiterature Review Tables: Plagiarism or Fair UseSomeone copied my assignment without my knowledge but I am now accused of directly assisting them to copy my work













5















My friend helped me with my assignment. I was having a bit of trouble and he showed me what he did.
The assignment was a speech with a powerpoint in the background.



I did not receive any help in the speech and it was all my own work but two of my slides are similar to his, and I copied his table. The speech is the part directly getting assessed while the powerpoint is merely for the theatrics. This was all done with his permission and he himself showed me how he did the slides.



The powerpoint was twelve slides long. Does this constitute plagiarism?










share|improve this question









New contributor




omi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Is the theatrics evaluated in your grade?

    – A Simple Algorithm
    17 hours ago






  • 2





    This is what I tell my students: cs.umb.edu/~eb/honesty . I'd approve of your getting help, as long as you acknowledged it.

    – Ethan Bolker
    10 hours ago






  • 1





    Could you expand on what you mean by 'copied his table', and what this table contains? Did you literally copy and paste it into your own slide deck? Or did you use the same row and column labels, or other formatting? Did you perhaps just use the same PowerPoint table presets? Was the contents of the table something you have no flexibility in reporting, such as raw data?

    – Matt
    6 hours ago















5















My friend helped me with my assignment. I was having a bit of trouble and he showed me what he did.
The assignment was a speech with a powerpoint in the background.



I did not receive any help in the speech and it was all my own work but two of my slides are similar to his, and I copied his table. The speech is the part directly getting assessed while the powerpoint is merely for the theatrics. This was all done with his permission and he himself showed me how he did the slides.



The powerpoint was twelve slides long. Does this constitute plagiarism?










share|improve this question









New contributor




omi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Is the theatrics evaluated in your grade?

    – A Simple Algorithm
    17 hours ago






  • 2





    This is what I tell my students: cs.umb.edu/~eb/honesty . I'd approve of your getting help, as long as you acknowledged it.

    – Ethan Bolker
    10 hours ago






  • 1





    Could you expand on what you mean by 'copied his table', and what this table contains? Did you literally copy and paste it into your own slide deck? Or did you use the same row and column labels, or other formatting? Did you perhaps just use the same PowerPoint table presets? Was the contents of the table something you have no flexibility in reporting, such as raw data?

    – Matt
    6 hours ago













5












5








5








My friend helped me with my assignment. I was having a bit of trouble and he showed me what he did.
The assignment was a speech with a powerpoint in the background.



I did not receive any help in the speech and it was all my own work but two of my slides are similar to his, and I copied his table. The speech is the part directly getting assessed while the powerpoint is merely for the theatrics. This was all done with his permission and he himself showed me how he did the slides.



The powerpoint was twelve slides long. Does this constitute plagiarism?










share|improve this question









New contributor




omi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












My friend helped me with my assignment. I was having a bit of trouble and he showed me what he did.
The assignment was a speech with a powerpoint in the background.



I did not receive any help in the speech and it was all my own work but two of my slides are similar to his, and I copied his table. The speech is the part directly getting assessed while the powerpoint is merely for the theatrics. This was all done with his permission and he himself showed me how he did the slides.



The powerpoint was twelve slides long. Does this constitute plagiarism?







paper-submission plagiarism






share|improve this question









New contributor




omi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




omi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 38 mins ago









Wrzlprmft

34.6k11109186




34.6k11109186






New contributor




omi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 17 hours ago









omiomi

292




292




New contributor




omi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





omi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






omi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • Is the theatrics evaluated in your grade?

    – A Simple Algorithm
    17 hours ago






  • 2





    This is what I tell my students: cs.umb.edu/~eb/honesty . I'd approve of your getting help, as long as you acknowledged it.

    – Ethan Bolker
    10 hours ago






  • 1





    Could you expand on what you mean by 'copied his table', and what this table contains? Did you literally copy and paste it into your own slide deck? Or did you use the same row and column labels, or other formatting? Did you perhaps just use the same PowerPoint table presets? Was the contents of the table something you have no flexibility in reporting, such as raw data?

    – Matt
    6 hours ago

















  • Is the theatrics evaluated in your grade?

    – A Simple Algorithm
    17 hours ago






  • 2





    This is what I tell my students: cs.umb.edu/~eb/honesty . I'd approve of your getting help, as long as you acknowledged it.

    – Ethan Bolker
    10 hours ago






  • 1





    Could you expand on what you mean by 'copied his table', and what this table contains? Did you literally copy and paste it into your own slide deck? Or did you use the same row and column labels, or other formatting? Did you perhaps just use the same PowerPoint table presets? Was the contents of the table something you have no flexibility in reporting, such as raw data?

    – Matt
    6 hours ago
















Is the theatrics evaluated in your grade?

– A Simple Algorithm
17 hours ago





Is the theatrics evaluated in your grade?

– A Simple Algorithm
17 hours ago




2




2





This is what I tell my students: cs.umb.edu/~eb/honesty . I'd approve of your getting help, as long as you acknowledged it.

– Ethan Bolker
10 hours ago





This is what I tell my students: cs.umb.edu/~eb/honesty . I'd approve of your getting help, as long as you acknowledged it.

– Ethan Bolker
10 hours ago




1




1





Could you expand on what you mean by 'copied his table', and what this table contains? Did you literally copy and paste it into your own slide deck? Or did you use the same row and column labels, or other formatting? Did you perhaps just use the same PowerPoint table presets? Was the contents of the table something you have no flexibility in reporting, such as raw data?

– Matt
6 hours ago





Could you expand on what you mean by 'copied his table', and what this table contains? Did you literally copy and paste it into your own slide deck? Or did you use the same row and column labels, or other formatting? Did you perhaps just use the same PowerPoint table presets? Was the contents of the table something you have no flexibility in reporting, such as raw data?

– Matt
6 hours ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















13















My friend helped me with my assignment...I copied his table...does this constitute plagiarism?




Yes: You copied his work, doing so without attribution is plagiarism.






share|improve this answer


















  • 14





    But if you put a notation at the bottom: "Table from <name>" then it is not plagiarism.

    – GEdgar
    17 hours ago






  • 4





    @GEdgar what's the betting there was no mention...

    – Solar Mike
    14 hours ago


















8














Whether it is plagiarism or not, and it is, may be less important than the bigger issue that it is almost certainly academic misconduct. Only your professor can give you advice on whether it is acceptable.



Getting some help may be fine, depending on the rules. Copying a table is less fine and becomes plagiarism if done without attribution. I would disallow it if I learn of it and would encourage you to do better. Since you are a student, I would even discourage your use of "similar" slides since you learn more by working independently and that is the point of the exercise.



The proportion of the copying makes no difference. I assume that you didn't reference your friend in the slide deck, making it plagiarism. I suspect that you think it is probably wrong to do this if you didn't cite the work of your friend.



Don't lose track of the lesson that learning is the real objective, not the production of any artifact.






share|improve this answer























  • +1 for "Don't lose track of the lesson that learning is the real objective, not the production of any artifact"

    – Neal Young
    7 hours ago






  • 1





    "The proportion of the copying makes no difference" - doesn't this lead to the heap paradox? Even with no copying, there will be at least a few words which will be the same. And if not that, then certainly some letters. If I've already seen "i++;" in someone else's program, am I forever forbidden to use it in my code? If not, then what is the smallest amount which is still fine?

    – vsz
    1 hour ago


















1














This was decades ago, but one of my professors told me, "I will accept work from you as "original" if you can produce it from memory without help." This would not include copy-pasting.



The reason for this test is to track your level of learning. If you could reproduce the table from memory, you would inevitably come up with some (perhaps small) difference from your friend's table. That would signify your learning the material.



You do not appear to have met that test.






share|improve this answer























  • This seems like a poor test for this scenario. Presumably OP now knows how to make tables in powerpoint (it is really quite easy, one or two clicks and its done). But you cant reasonably expect people to have memorized the data within their table. So I guess tables never count as original work? Or maybe with an exception for data, it does count as original work for OP? Neither seems right to me. We also have yet to get confirmation from OP that "copied his table" means literally copy/paste or a manual equilalent. It could mean that OP used the same row/column labels and style as his friend.

    – Matt
    3 hours ago











  • Finally, your test seems to be based on what OP "could" do, but then draw conclusions based on what he did do. We dont know that OP cant make such a table on his own. Plagiarism isnt based on what people can do, but what they have done.

    – Matt
    3 hours ago












  • @Matt: At this time, we don't know that the OP CAN reproduce this table from memory. We do know that he "copied." So the way for him to correct this is to "pull" the table that he submitted, and replace it with his own work, if it is not too late. And worst come to worst, maybe he'll learn something for next time.But if he had done it right the first time, there would be no need for him to worry about plagiarizing, or ask the question.

    – Tom Au
    2 hours ago












  • Yes. That is correct.

    – Matt
    2 hours ago











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3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









13















My friend helped me with my assignment...I copied his table...does this constitute plagiarism?




Yes: You copied his work, doing so without attribution is plagiarism.






share|improve this answer


















  • 14





    But if you put a notation at the bottom: "Table from <name>" then it is not plagiarism.

    – GEdgar
    17 hours ago






  • 4





    @GEdgar what's the betting there was no mention...

    – Solar Mike
    14 hours ago















13















My friend helped me with my assignment...I copied his table...does this constitute plagiarism?




Yes: You copied his work, doing so without attribution is plagiarism.






share|improve this answer


















  • 14





    But if you put a notation at the bottom: "Table from <name>" then it is not plagiarism.

    – GEdgar
    17 hours ago






  • 4





    @GEdgar what's the betting there was no mention...

    – Solar Mike
    14 hours ago













13












13








13








My friend helped me with my assignment...I copied his table...does this constitute plagiarism?




Yes: You copied his work, doing so without attribution is plagiarism.






share|improve this answer














My friend helped me with my assignment...I copied his table...does this constitute plagiarism?




Yes: You copied his work, doing so without attribution is plagiarism.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 17 hours ago









user2768user2768

15k33860




15k33860







  • 14





    But if you put a notation at the bottom: "Table from <name>" then it is not plagiarism.

    – GEdgar
    17 hours ago






  • 4





    @GEdgar what's the betting there was no mention...

    – Solar Mike
    14 hours ago












  • 14





    But if you put a notation at the bottom: "Table from <name>" then it is not plagiarism.

    – GEdgar
    17 hours ago






  • 4





    @GEdgar what's the betting there was no mention...

    – Solar Mike
    14 hours ago







14




14





But if you put a notation at the bottom: "Table from <name>" then it is not plagiarism.

– GEdgar
17 hours ago





But if you put a notation at the bottom: "Table from <name>" then it is not plagiarism.

– GEdgar
17 hours ago




4




4





@GEdgar what's the betting there was no mention...

– Solar Mike
14 hours ago





@GEdgar what's the betting there was no mention...

– Solar Mike
14 hours ago











8














Whether it is plagiarism or not, and it is, may be less important than the bigger issue that it is almost certainly academic misconduct. Only your professor can give you advice on whether it is acceptable.



Getting some help may be fine, depending on the rules. Copying a table is less fine and becomes plagiarism if done without attribution. I would disallow it if I learn of it and would encourage you to do better. Since you are a student, I would even discourage your use of "similar" slides since you learn more by working independently and that is the point of the exercise.



The proportion of the copying makes no difference. I assume that you didn't reference your friend in the slide deck, making it plagiarism. I suspect that you think it is probably wrong to do this if you didn't cite the work of your friend.



Don't lose track of the lesson that learning is the real objective, not the production of any artifact.






share|improve this answer























  • +1 for "Don't lose track of the lesson that learning is the real objective, not the production of any artifact"

    – Neal Young
    7 hours ago






  • 1





    "The proportion of the copying makes no difference" - doesn't this lead to the heap paradox? Even with no copying, there will be at least a few words which will be the same. And if not that, then certainly some letters. If I've already seen "i++;" in someone else's program, am I forever forbidden to use it in my code? If not, then what is the smallest amount which is still fine?

    – vsz
    1 hour ago















8














Whether it is plagiarism or not, and it is, may be less important than the bigger issue that it is almost certainly academic misconduct. Only your professor can give you advice on whether it is acceptable.



Getting some help may be fine, depending on the rules. Copying a table is less fine and becomes plagiarism if done without attribution. I would disallow it if I learn of it and would encourage you to do better. Since you are a student, I would even discourage your use of "similar" slides since you learn more by working independently and that is the point of the exercise.



The proportion of the copying makes no difference. I assume that you didn't reference your friend in the slide deck, making it plagiarism. I suspect that you think it is probably wrong to do this if you didn't cite the work of your friend.



Don't lose track of the lesson that learning is the real objective, not the production of any artifact.






share|improve this answer























  • +1 for "Don't lose track of the lesson that learning is the real objective, not the production of any artifact"

    – Neal Young
    7 hours ago






  • 1





    "The proportion of the copying makes no difference" - doesn't this lead to the heap paradox? Even with no copying, there will be at least a few words which will be the same. And if not that, then certainly some letters. If I've already seen "i++;" in someone else's program, am I forever forbidden to use it in my code? If not, then what is the smallest amount which is still fine?

    – vsz
    1 hour ago













8












8








8







Whether it is plagiarism or not, and it is, may be less important than the bigger issue that it is almost certainly academic misconduct. Only your professor can give you advice on whether it is acceptable.



Getting some help may be fine, depending on the rules. Copying a table is less fine and becomes plagiarism if done without attribution. I would disallow it if I learn of it and would encourage you to do better. Since you are a student, I would even discourage your use of "similar" slides since you learn more by working independently and that is the point of the exercise.



The proportion of the copying makes no difference. I assume that you didn't reference your friend in the slide deck, making it plagiarism. I suspect that you think it is probably wrong to do this if you didn't cite the work of your friend.



Don't lose track of the lesson that learning is the real objective, not the production of any artifact.






share|improve this answer













Whether it is plagiarism or not, and it is, may be less important than the bigger issue that it is almost certainly academic misconduct. Only your professor can give you advice on whether it is acceptable.



Getting some help may be fine, depending on the rules. Copying a table is less fine and becomes plagiarism if done without attribution. I would disallow it if I learn of it and would encourage you to do better. Since you are a student, I would even discourage your use of "similar" slides since you learn more by working independently and that is the point of the exercise.



The proportion of the copying makes no difference. I assume that you didn't reference your friend in the slide deck, making it plagiarism. I suspect that you think it is probably wrong to do this if you didn't cite the work of your friend.



Don't lose track of the lesson that learning is the real objective, not the production of any artifact.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 17 hours ago









BuffyBuffy

55.7k16175269




55.7k16175269












  • +1 for "Don't lose track of the lesson that learning is the real objective, not the production of any artifact"

    – Neal Young
    7 hours ago






  • 1





    "The proportion of the copying makes no difference" - doesn't this lead to the heap paradox? Even with no copying, there will be at least a few words which will be the same. And if not that, then certainly some letters. If I've already seen "i++;" in someone else's program, am I forever forbidden to use it in my code? If not, then what is the smallest amount which is still fine?

    – vsz
    1 hour ago

















  • +1 for "Don't lose track of the lesson that learning is the real objective, not the production of any artifact"

    – Neal Young
    7 hours ago






  • 1





    "The proportion of the copying makes no difference" - doesn't this lead to the heap paradox? Even with no copying, there will be at least a few words which will be the same. And if not that, then certainly some letters. If I've already seen "i++;" in someone else's program, am I forever forbidden to use it in my code? If not, then what is the smallest amount which is still fine?

    – vsz
    1 hour ago
















+1 for "Don't lose track of the lesson that learning is the real objective, not the production of any artifact"

– Neal Young
7 hours ago





+1 for "Don't lose track of the lesson that learning is the real objective, not the production of any artifact"

– Neal Young
7 hours ago




1




1





"The proportion of the copying makes no difference" - doesn't this lead to the heap paradox? Even with no copying, there will be at least a few words which will be the same. And if not that, then certainly some letters. If I've already seen "i++;" in someone else's program, am I forever forbidden to use it in my code? If not, then what is the smallest amount which is still fine?

– vsz
1 hour ago





"The proportion of the copying makes no difference" - doesn't this lead to the heap paradox? Even with no copying, there will be at least a few words which will be the same. And if not that, then certainly some letters. If I've already seen "i++;" in someone else's program, am I forever forbidden to use it in my code? If not, then what is the smallest amount which is still fine?

– vsz
1 hour ago











1














This was decades ago, but one of my professors told me, "I will accept work from you as "original" if you can produce it from memory without help." This would not include copy-pasting.



The reason for this test is to track your level of learning. If you could reproduce the table from memory, you would inevitably come up with some (perhaps small) difference from your friend's table. That would signify your learning the material.



You do not appear to have met that test.






share|improve this answer























  • This seems like a poor test for this scenario. Presumably OP now knows how to make tables in powerpoint (it is really quite easy, one or two clicks and its done). But you cant reasonably expect people to have memorized the data within their table. So I guess tables never count as original work? Or maybe with an exception for data, it does count as original work for OP? Neither seems right to me. We also have yet to get confirmation from OP that "copied his table" means literally copy/paste or a manual equilalent. It could mean that OP used the same row/column labels and style as his friend.

    – Matt
    3 hours ago











  • Finally, your test seems to be based on what OP "could" do, but then draw conclusions based on what he did do. We dont know that OP cant make such a table on his own. Plagiarism isnt based on what people can do, but what they have done.

    – Matt
    3 hours ago












  • @Matt: At this time, we don't know that the OP CAN reproduce this table from memory. We do know that he "copied." So the way for him to correct this is to "pull" the table that he submitted, and replace it with his own work, if it is not too late. And worst come to worst, maybe he'll learn something for next time.But if he had done it right the first time, there would be no need for him to worry about plagiarizing, or ask the question.

    – Tom Au
    2 hours ago












  • Yes. That is correct.

    – Matt
    2 hours ago















1














This was decades ago, but one of my professors told me, "I will accept work from you as "original" if you can produce it from memory without help." This would not include copy-pasting.



The reason for this test is to track your level of learning. If you could reproduce the table from memory, you would inevitably come up with some (perhaps small) difference from your friend's table. That would signify your learning the material.



You do not appear to have met that test.






share|improve this answer























  • This seems like a poor test for this scenario. Presumably OP now knows how to make tables in powerpoint (it is really quite easy, one or two clicks and its done). But you cant reasonably expect people to have memorized the data within their table. So I guess tables never count as original work? Or maybe with an exception for data, it does count as original work for OP? Neither seems right to me. We also have yet to get confirmation from OP that "copied his table" means literally copy/paste or a manual equilalent. It could mean that OP used the same row/column labels and style as his friend.

    – Matt
    3 hours ago











  • Finally, your test seems to be based on what OP "could" do, but then draw conclusions based on what he did do. We dont know that OP cant make such a table on his own. Plagiarism isnt based on what people can do, but what they have done.

    – Matt
    3 hours ago












  • @Matt: At this time, we don't know that the OP CAN reproduce this table from memory. We do know that he "copied." So the way for him to correct this is to "pull" the table that he submitted, and replace it with his own work, if it is not too late. And worst come to worst, maybe he'll learn something for next time.But if he had done it right the first time, there would be no need for him to worry about plagiarizing, or ask the question.

    – Tom Au
    2 hours ago












  • Yes. That is correct.

    – Matt
    2 hours ago













1












1








1







This was decades ago, but one of my professors told me, "I will accept work from you as "original" if you can produce it from memory without help." This would not include copy-pasting.



The reason for this test is to track your level of learning. If you could reproduce the table from memory, you would inevitably come up with some (perhaps small) difference from your friend's table. That would signify your learning the material.



You do not appear to have met that test.






share|improve this answer













This was decades ago, but one of my professors told me, "I will accept work from you as "original" if you can produce it from memory without help." This would not include copy-pasting.



The reason for this test is to track your level of learning. If you could reproduce the table from memory, you would inevitably come up with some (perhaps small) difference from your friend's table. That would signify your learning the material.



You do not appear to have met that test.







share|improve this answer












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answered 4 hours ago









Tom AuTom Au

4,99011123




4,99011123












  • This seems like a poor test for this scenario. Presumably OP now knows how to make tables in powerpoint (it is really quite easy, one or two clicks and its done). But you cant reasonably expect people to have memorized the data within their table. So I guess tables never count as original work? Or maybe with an exception for data, it does count as original work for OP? Neither seems right to me. We also have yet to get confirmation from OP that "copied his table" means literally copy/paste or a manual equilalent. It could mean that OP used the same row/column labels and style as his friend.

    – Matt
    3 hours ago











  • Finally, your test seems to be based on what OP "could" do, but then draw conclusions based on what he did do. We dont know that OP cant make such a table on his own. Plagiarism isnt based on what people can do, but what they have done.

    – Matt
    3 hours ago












  • @Matt: At this time, we don't know that the OP CAN reproduce this table from memory. We do know that he "copied." So the way for him to correct this is to "pull" the table that he submitted, and replace it with his own work, if it is not too late. And worst come to worst, maybe he'll learn something for next time.But if he had done it right the first time, there would be no need for him to worry about plagiarizing, or ask the question.

    – Tom Au
    2 hours ago












  • Yes. That is correct.

    – Matt
    2 hours ago

















  • This seems like a poor test for this scenario. Presumably OP now knows how to make tables in powerpoint (it is really quite easy, one or two clicks and its done). But you cant reasonably expect people to have memorized the data within their table. So I guess tables never count as original work? Or maybe with an exception for data, it does count as original work for OP? Neither seems right to me. We also have yet to get confirmation from OP that "copied his table" means literally copy/paste or a manual equilalent. It could mean that OP used the same row/column labels and style as his friend.

    – Matt
    3 hours ago











  • Finally, your test seems to be based on what OP "could" do, but then draw conclusions based on what he did do. We dont know that OP cant make such a table on his own. Plagiarism isnt based on what people can do, but what they have done.

    – Matt
    3 hours ago












  • @Matt: At this time, we don't know that the OP CAN reproduce this table from memory. We do know that he "copied." So the way for him to correct this is to "pull" the table that he submitted, and replace it with his own work, if it is not too late. And worst come to worst, maybe he'll learn something for next time.But if he had done it right the first time, there would be no need for him to worry about plagiarizing, or ask the question.

    – Tom Au
    2 hours ago












  • Yes. That is correct.

    – Matt
    2 hours ago
















This seems like a poor test for this scenario. Presumably OP now knows how to make tables in powerpoint (it is really quite easy, one or two clicks and its done). But you cant reasonably expect people to have memorized the data within their table. So I guess tables never count as original work? Or maybe with an exception for data, it does count as original work for OP? Neither seems right to me. We also have yet to get confirmation from OP that "copied his table" means literally copy/paste or a manual equilalent. It could mean that OP used the same row/column labels and style as his friend.

– Matt
3 hours ago





This seems like a poor test for this scenario. Presumably OP now knows how to make tables in powerpoint (it is really quite easy, one or two clicks and its done). But you cant reasonably expect people to have memorized the data within their table. So I guess tables never count as original work? Or maybe with an exception for data, it does count as original work for OP? Neither seems right to me. We also have yet to get confirmation from OP that "copied his table" means literally copy/paste or a manual equilalent. It could mean that OP used the same row/column labels and style as his friend.

– Matt
3 hours ago













Finally, your test seems to be based on what OP "could" do, but then draw conclusions based on what he did do. We dont know that OP cant make such a table on his own. Plagiarism isnt based on what people can do, but what they have done.

– Matt
3 hours ago






Finally, your test seems to be based on what OP "could" do, but then draw conclusions based on what he did do. We dont know that OP cant make such a table on his own. Plagiarism isnt based on what people can do, but what they have done.

– Matt
3 hours ago














@Matt: At this time, we don't know that the OP CAN reproduce this table from memory. We do know that he "copied." So the way for him to correct this is to "pull" the table that he submitted, and replace it with his own work, if it is not too late. And worst come to worst, maybe he'll learn something for next time.But if he had done it right the first time, there would be no need for him to worry about plagiarizing, or ask the question.

– Tom Au
2 hours ago






@Matt: At this time, we don't know that the OP CAN reproduce this table from memory. We do know that he "copied." So the way for him to correct this is to "pull" the table that he submitted, and replace it with his own work, if it is not too late. And worst come to worst, maybe he'll learn something for next time.But if he had done it right the first time, there would be no need for him to worry about plagiarizing, or ask the question.

– Tom Au
2 hours ago














Yes. That is correct.

– Matt
2 hours ago





Yes. That is correct.

– Matt
2 hours ago










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