06-12-2013, 06:40 PM
I'm sure if you ASK they'll say no. You should scour the academic policy. I'd simply add a twist, and change it as I went. Write it for the more demanding class, and then re-write it (paraphrase what you already wrote) for the second class. In the same way you'd paraphrase something you found in an encyclopedia.
A long time ago, when I was a TESC student, I used a free online plagiarism checker similar to Turn It In. I'd never used one before, so when I did my draft, I ran it through just to be sure nothing was flagged. Later, when I did the final copy and ran it through, it flagged a lot of my content!!!! My only theory, and I've never been able to say for sure, is that it logged my draft in some way. I remember asking many people about it and no one could tell me for sure- but I've stopped using them. Anyway, my whole point, is that you might have 2 teachers running your paper through such a program, so you want to keep the wording original both times. (same sources, same content are fine in my view)
A long time ago, when I was a TESC student, I used a free online plagiarism checker similar to Turn It In. I'd never used one before, so when I did my draft, I ran it through just to be sure nothing was flagged. Later, when I did the final copy and ran it through, it flagged a lot of my content!!!! My only theory, and I've never been able to say for sure, is that it logged my draft in some way. I remember asking many people about it and no one could tell me for sure- but I've stopped using them. Anyway, my whole point, is that you might have 2 teachers running your paper through such a program, so you want to keep the wording original both times. (same sources, same content are fine in my view)

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