<p>Yesterday as my AP Language class was ending my teacher mentioned that three students has plagiarized a recent assignment, and if they did not come in and speak with him after school they would not only fail it but loose any ability to re-submit it. I thought nothing of it at the time, but when I got home and checked my grades online sure enough there was an F waiting for me.</p>
<p>The point of the assignment was to choose a controversial issue and present it through a dialogue of two different speakers, one concerned with society and the other with individualism. I picked physician assisted suicide, and since I wasn't that versed in the subject my first thought was to look up some pros and cons of it and base my arguments around them. I really don't understand how that can be considered plagiarism- there's only so many logical arguments that can be made on a subject. My assignment matched up perfectly in format to examples we went over in class, the only difference was I researched my points from an online source instead of coming up with them off the top of my head. We've never been instructed to cite sources, or even how to. (aside from something like an MLA)</p>
<p>I'm going to go in early tomorrow (in about 3 hours) and speak with my teacher about it. If anybody has any advice it'd be much appreciated.</p>
<p>
[quote=Soruce, literally first result on google.]
Should an incurably-ill patient be able to commit physician-assisted suicide?
Yes:
Tremendous pain and suffering of patients can be saved.
The right to die should be a fundamental freedom of each person.
Patients can die with dignity rather than have the illness reduce them to a shell of their former selves.
Health care costs can be reduced, which would save estates and lower insurance premiums.
Nurse and doctor time can be freed up to work on savable patients.
Prevention of suicide is a violation of religious freedom.
Pain and anguish of the patient's family and friends can be lessened, and they can say their final goodbyes.
Reasonable laws can be constructed which prevent abuse and still protect the value of human life.
Vital organs can be saved, allowing doctors to save the lives of others.
Without physician assistance, people may commit suicide in a messy, horrifying, and traumatic way.</p>
<p>No:
It would violate doctors' Hippocratic oath.
It demeans the value of human life.
It could open the floodgates to non-critical patient suicides and other abuses.
Many religions prohibit suicide and the intentional killing of others.
Doctors and families may be prompted to give up on recovery much too early.
Government and insurance companies may put undue pressure on doctors to avoid heroic measures or recommend the assisted-suicide procedure.
Miracle cures or recoveries can occur.
Doctors are given too much power, and can be wrong or unethical.
<p>I can certainly sympathize with your argument; however, I can also see your teacher’s refusing to change her mind. </p>
<p>I would argue your case the same way you just did. Emphasize how you used your internet sources to simply guide your train of thought, and show that your commentary makes your work distinctively different from anything found on Google.</p>
Yeah, those were areas where the source used vocab that I really liked. Obviously if I knew the paper was going to be compared to the source I wouldn’t of been that repetitive. </p>