Introduction
Plagiarism undermines academic integrity and research credibility in B.Pharm education. This guide explains plagiarism — its definition, common types (direct copying, paraphrasing without citation, mosaic plagiarism, and self-plagiarism), and practical avoidance strategies such as proper citation, paraphrasing techniques, use of referencing styles (Vancouver, APA), plagiarism detection tools, and ethical lab reporting. It highlights implications for pharmacy students writing lab reports, dissertations, case studies, and regulatory documents. Clear examples, prevention tips, and citation best practices build responsible research habits essential for future pharmacists. Keywords: plagiarism, types, avoidance, citation, paraphrasing, academic integrity, Turnitin, referencing. Now let’s test your knowledge with 30 MCQs on this topic.
Q1. What is the best concise definition of plagiarism in academic work?
- Reproducing someone else’s work without permission only when published
- Using someone else’s ideas, words, or data without proper attribution
- Collaborating with peers on a group assignment
- Submitting the same assignment to two different courses with permission
Correct Answer: Using someone else’s ideas, words, or data without proper attribution
Q2. Which of the following describes “mosaic plagiarism”?
- Translating a paper from another language and citing the original
- Copying sections verbatim and including quotation marks and citation
- Mixing copied phrases from different sources into your own text without proper citation
- Submitting your previous coursework without changes and without disclosure
Correct Answer: Mixing copied phrases from different sources into your own text without proper citation
Q3. Self-plagiarism occurs when a student:
- Cites their previous work in a new assignment
- Reuses substantial parts of their own earlier submitted work without disclosure
- Collaborates openly with peers and acknowledges them
- Quotes a published article with quotation marks and a reference
Correct Answer: Reuses substantial parts of their own earlier submitted work without disclosure
Q4. Which practice most effectively avoids plagiarism when summarizing a source?
- Changing three or four words in a sentence from the source
- Copying the sentence and adding a citation at the end
- Reading the source, writing the idea in your own words, and citing the source
- Using the source as memory and not citing because it is paraphrased
Correct Answer: Reading the source, writing the idea in your own words, and citing the source
Q5. When must you include a citation in a B.Pharm lab report?
- Only when you copy text verbatim from another report
- When using data, methods, images, or ideas that are not your original work
- When the information is considered common knowledge in pharmacy
- Never, if the supervisor already knows the source
Correct Answer: When using data, methods, images, or ideas that are not your original work
Q6. Which referencing style is commonly used in medical and pharmacy journals for citations and numbered references?
- Harvard
- Chicago
- Vancouver
- MLA
Correct Answer: Vancouver
Q7. Patchwriting is best described as:
- Composing an entirely original paragraph after deep understanding
- Copying exact sentences with quotation marks and citation
- Close paraphrasing that keeps original structure and substitutes words without full understanding
- Using citation managers to format references automatically
Correct Answer: Close paraphrasing that keeps original structure and substitutes words without full understanding
Q8. Which action is required when reproducing a published figure in your thesis?
- Include the figure and do nothing else
- Redraw the figure poorly to avoid permission
- Obtain permission if required and provide a proper caption and citation
- Replace figure legend with your own without citing the source
Correct Answer: Obtain permission if required and provide a proper caption and citation
Q9. A Turnitin similarity report shows 28% similarity. The correct interpretation is:
- It is acceptable; any score below 30% is allowed
- High similarity always means cheating
- Similarity indicates overlap; the nature of matched text must be evaluated for proper citation and context
- You can ignore the report if your supervisor approves
Correct Answer: Similarity indicates overlap; the nature of matched text must be evaluated for proper citation and context
Q10. Which of the following is NOT considered plagiarism?
- Failing to quote verbatim text and omitting citation
- Submitting another student’s work as your own
- Describing a well-known chemical formula without citation when it is common knowledge
- Using a published image without attribution or permission
Correct Answer: Describing a well-known chemical formula without citation when it is common knowledge
Q11. In collaborative assignments, how should group contributions be handled to avoid plagiarism?
- One member submits the whole work without naming others
- Each member lists their contributions and the group submits a single document with shared authorship attribution
- Members secretly copy sections from online sources
- Only the leader is acknowledged in the submission
Correct Answer: Each member lists their contributions and the group submits a single document with shared authorship attribution
Q12. Which of the following is the most appropriate first step when paraphrasing a complex passage?
- Replace every noun with a synonym
- Read until you fully understand, then write the idea in your own words without looking at the original
- Copy the passage and change the order of sentences
- Summarize using only one-sentence quotes
Correct Answer: Read until you fully understand, then write the idea in your own words without looking at the original
Q13. Which scenario describes “contract cheating”?
- Citing a peer-reviewed article in your report
- Paid third party writes your assignment and you submit it as your own
- Working together in a lab and sharing data transparently
- Using a citation manager to format references
Correct Answer: Paid third party writes your assignment and you submit it as your own
Q14. For clinical case reports involving patients, avoiding plagiarism also requires:
- Using patient data without any consent as long as names are omitted
- Citing sources for background and obtaining patient consent or de-identification per guidelines
- Copying case descriptions from previous reports because they are factual
- Not referencing diagnostic criteria because everyone knows them
Correct Answer: Citing sources for background and obtaining patient consent or de-identification per guidelines
Q15. Which tool helps manage references and reduce citation errors in pharmacy writing?
- Microscope
- EndNote or Mendeley
- Text editor without citation features
- Spreadsheet software only
Correct Answer: EndNote or Mendeley
Q16. When using direct quotes in a dissertation, the correct practice is to:
- Use quotes for long passages without citation
- Enclose text in quotation marks, provide an in-text citation, and include full reference
- Paraphrase but remove the citation
- Use quotes without references if the source is widely known
Correct Answer: Enclose text in quotation marks, provide an in-text citation, and include full reference
Q17. Which of these is an example of data plagiarism?
- Using your own raw data with proper lab notebook entries
- Reproducing published experimental results without citation and presenting as your data
- Citing a dataset you used from an open repository
- Sharing anonymized data under a data-sharing agreement
Correct Answer: Reproducing published experimental results without citation and presenting as your data
Q18. In which case is permission from the copyright holder usually required?
- Paraphrasing a short idea and providing citation
- Reproducing a full table or figure from a recent journal article
- Describing a general principle taught in lectures
- Referring to a drug’s common name without citation
Correct Answer: Reproducing a full table or figure from a recent journal article
Q19. Which is the best way to cite an online drug monograph used in a lab report?
- Ignore citation because it’s a website
- Provide a full reference including author/organization, title, year, URL, and access date according to the chosen style
- Write the URL only in the text
- State the drug name without referencing
Correct Answer: Provide a full reference including author/organization, title, year, URL, and access date according to the chosen style
Q20. Which of the following best describes “citation” versus “reference”?
- Citation appears in-text to credit a source; reference provides full bibliographic details in the reference list
- Citation is the same as reference and both appear only in the bibliography
- Reference is used only for websites and citation for books
- Citation is optional while reference is mandatory
Correct Answer: Citation appears in-text to credit a source; reference provides full bibliographic details in the reference list
Q21. Which practice reduces risk of accidental plagiarism when drafting a research paper?
- Working without notes and relying on memory
- Keeping detailed source notes, using quotation marks for copied text, and documenting ideas and page numbers
- Copying and pasting from sources into the draft without labeling
- Waiting until the end to add all citations
Correct Answer: Keeping detailed source notes, using quotation marks for copied text, and documenting ideas and page numbers
Q22. Which statement about “common knowledge” is correct?
- All facts found online are common knowledge and need no citation
- Common knowledge varies by discipline and generally requires no citation if widely known by the intended audience
- Any statement more than ten years old is common knowledge
- Statistical data always counts as common knowledge
Correct Answer: Common knowledge varies by discipline and generally requires no citation if widely known by the intended audience
Q23. If you translate an article from another language into English and include it in your work, you should:
- Translate freely and cite the original source and indicate translation
- Translate and claim it as original because language changed
- Only cite if the original was published in the same country
- Not cite because translation makes it new work
Correct Answer: Translate freely and cite the original source and indicate translation
Q24. Which institutional action is typically taken for confirmed major plagiarism in a thesis?
- Issue a friendly reminder only
- Ignore it if the student apologizes
- Academic investigation that may lead to grade penalties, thesis rejection, or disciplinary measures
- Automatic award of degree without review
Correct Answer: Academic investigation that may lead to grade penalties, thesis rejection, or disciplinary measures
Q25. What is the ethical way to use AI-generated text in academic writing?
- Present AI-generated text as entirely your own without disclosure
- Use AI for drafting if allowed, verify accuracy, edit substantially, and disclose use per institution policy
- Use AI to fabricate references to save time
- Submit AI output without checking for factual errors
Correct Answer: Use AI for drafting if allowed, verify accuracy, edit substantially, and disclose use per institution policy
Q26. Which option correctly identifies “mosaic” vs “direct” plagiarism examples?
- Mosaic: copying entire paragraph verbatim; Direct: mixing phrases from many sources without credit
- Mosaic: mixing phrases from multiple sources without credit; Direct: copying text word-for-word without citation
- Mosaic and direct are the same and interchangeable
- Direct plagiarism never requires citation but mosaic does
Correct Answer: Mosaic: mixing phrases from multiple sources without credit; Direct: copying text word-for-word without citation
Q27. When citing a clinical trial, which element is most important to include in the reference?
- The investigator’s home address only
- Trial registration number, study title, authors, journal, year, and DOI or URL if applicable
- Only the drug name tested
- Personal communication from a participant
Correct Answer: Trial registration number, study title, authors, journal, year, and DOI or URL if applicable
Q28. How should you handle unattributed material found in a student’s group project?
- Ignore it and grade the whole team normally
- Investigate authorship, discuss with the group, and follow institutional plagiarism procedures
- Immediately fail the entire class without inquiry
- Remove the unattributed material and submit the rest
Correct Answer: Investigate authorship, discuss with the group, and follow institutional plagiarism procedures
Q29. Which is the correct approach to citing a dataset obtained from an open repository?
- No citation required because data is open
- Cite the dataset with persistent identifier (DOI), authors/creators, title, repository, and access date
- Only list the repository name in acknowledgements
- Refer to the dataset verbally in the discussion without reference
Correct Answer: Cite the dataset with persistent identifier (DOI), authors/creators, title, repository, and access date
Q30. Which practical habit most consistently helps B.Pharm students avoid plagiarism during research writing?
- Waiting to collect all references after the draft is finished
- Keeping meticulous source records, using quotation marks for direct quotes, and routinely checking drafts with plagiarism detection tools
- Copying background sections from older notes without citation
- Relying solely on memory for where ideas originated
Correct Answer: Keeping meticulous source records, using quotation marks for direct quotes, and routinely checking drafts with plagiarism detection tools

I am a Registered Pharmacist under the Pharmacy Act, 1948, and the founder of PharmacyFreak.com. I hold a Bachelor of Pharmacy degree from Rungta College of Pharmaceutical Science and Research. With a strong academic foundation and practical knowledge, I am committed to providing accurate, easy-to-understand content to support pharmacy students and professionals. My aim is to make complex pharmaceutical concepts accessible and useful for real-world application.
Mail- Sachin@pharmacyfreak.com

