Plagiarism Screening
Plagiarism is presenting the words or ideas of someone else as your own without proper acknowledgment to the source. When you work in a research paper, you will probably find supporting material for your paper from works by others. It's okay to quote people and used their ideas, but you do need to correctly credit them. Even when you summarize or paraphrase information found in books, articles, or Web pages, you must acknowledge the original author. This means giving credit to the source of the information even when you have rephrased it in your own words. By doing so, you respect intellectual property rights and maintain academic integrity, avoiding plagiarism. Proper citation ensures that the original authors receive recognition for their work and allows readers to trace back the information to its original context (Sources: http://library.ucsc.edu/help/research/what-is-plagiarism).
To uphold the academic honesty and integrity and as a way to inform readers that certain part of our writing is free from acts of plagiarism, then in publishing articles through examination of anti-plagiarism. Journal of Counseling and Educational Research using Crossref Similarity Check Powered by iThenticate to checks academic papers literally on the fly.