Turnitin Similarity
Similarity by Turnitin is a Moodle plugin available to instructors that acts as a text matching software. The tool works with Moodle Assignments, Quizzes, and Workshops.
What you'll find here
This page contains information about Turnitin Similarity and opportunities to best practices for using it as a teaching tool.
Faculty must follow Concordia's Educational Technololgy Guidelines, as it pertains to the protection of personal information, privacy and intellectual property.
How does Similarity work?
Once enabled and a student submits their work, the software searches for direct textual matches in the content against its databases. The tool will generate a report, typically in 5–30 minutes, depending on the length of the document and when you have scheduled report generation (for example, immediately following submission or at the due date).
Included databases
Similarity checks student work against the following databases:
- Internet: an active archive of 90+ billion current and archived web pages
- Publications: a collection of over 80 million articles from library databases, textbook publishers, digital reference collections, subscription-based publications, homework helper sites, and books
- Crossref: a collection of published scholarly works
- Crossref Posted Content: a collection of scholarly works that have been submitted but not yet published
- Submitted works: all items previously submitted to any of the repositories that are part of the account, including both public submitted works and a repository for Concordia University
How to use it
To enable Turnitin Similarity, refer to the “Enable Turnitin Similarity in Moodle” guide or on the Help for Instructors page (login required).
You can also save submissions in Concordia’s Turnitin repository so that they are available for future comparisons by enabling “Index all submissions” in the Moodle activity settings. This is a way to compare current and future submissions against submissions from previous classes and instructors. In other words, it can signal if a student has “recycled” a submission from another student. It’s worth noting that although submissions will be saved for comparison purposes, neither the submitted work nor student information will be accessible to faculty, even when there is a match.
You can make the Similarity Reports visible to students by enabling the option “Allow students to view Similarity Reports.”
Note that if you are using an activity that is duplicated from a previous Moodle course or assignment in your course, you will need to select the ‘edit’ option and then re-save the activity. Otherwise, reports will not be generated.
The Turnitin Similarity Report
The Similarity Report is divided into two tabs:
- Similarity: identifies text that is found to match other sources. This includes an overall similarity score; the proportion of text that is either not cited or quoted, or both, or is properly cited and quoted; and a navigable list of text blocks that are found to match a database source.
- Integrity flags: highlights text which may have been manipulated to avoid detection.
- Note that the AI Writing tab is not included in our licence and is therefore not available in the Similarity Report.
Turnitin support
Notifying students when using Similarity
If you intend to use Turnitin Similarity in your course, it is advised that you include a statement in your course syllabus so that students are aware their work will be subject to an authenticity check.
Course syllabus recommended text
For some of your assignments, your professor will be using the software Turnitin Similarity. It uses text matching technology as a method to uphold the University’s high academic integrity standards to detect any potential plagiarism. Similarity is integrated in Moodle. For assignments set up to use Similarity, the software will review your work when you upload it to Moodle. You may review Similarity’s privacy policy.
Best practices
Using Turnitin Similarity is an opportunity to have a frank discussion about academic integrity with your students. The notion of intellectual property is a key pillar of the university, and academic integrity should be an explicit teaching point in your course. There are many reasons why we should not assume that all students in our classrooms already know about the academic code of conduct:
- Some students may not yet fully understand what constitutes academic integrity,
- Some students may lack skills in citing sources and paraphrasing
- Some students may not be aware of the emphasis on academic integrity in North American universities
- Some students may have been taught to value directly quoting from a source and discouraged from paraphrasing.
Therefore, be sure to set aside some class time to emphasize the importance of academic integrity rather than assuming your students are already versed in Concordia’s standards (see section on Leverage the resources available to you at Concordia below).
- Your Moodle course page includes a short Academic Integrity Module (in the Administration Block) with a short video that defines academic integrity, examples, and a brief quiz to check student comprehension.
- The Library has resources on citation for you and your students:
- A resource on how to cite and provides access to specific styles in different disciplines.
- A learning module on citing from the library’s research skills tutorials. It includes resources, interactive activities and videos to help students learn why they should cite and practice citations.
- A resource to help students manage and organize their bibliographic references and prepare a bibliography with Zotero.
- Information about Academic Conduct that students need to know while studying at Concordia.
- Student Success Centre (SSC) resources include writing assistance appointments, and tips on avoiding plagiarism and how to paraphrase.
It is advisable to first use Turnitin Similarity with a low-stakes assessment. A short assignment that emphasizes citation and paraphrasing in an authentic context (e.g., two to three paragraphs that compare and contrast two authors’ views on a topic) is a good introduction to the importance of honing citation and paraphrasing skills. Consider pulling anonymous extracts of student work to model accurate citations and good examples of paraphrasing, and using a ‘think-aloud’ protocol to talk explicitly to students about what makes them good examples. You can create a few poor examples as well and have students work in pairs or groups to revise them. This type of activity will give them active and focused practice with citing and paraphrasing skills. You could also consider offering students who had difficulties with citing or paraphrasing the option to revise their own work to help them further improve.
By default, Turnitin Similarity is configured so that students do not see their Similarity Report when they submit their work; however, it is possible to allow students to access the report after they submit their work, and to adapt their work accordingly. Enabling this feature and allowing multiple submissions supports students by providing feedback and practice to improve their writing skills. Additionally, enabling this feature for a low-stakes assignment may give students the opportunity to see what skills they need to improve. You can also facilitate a focussed class discussion (or one-on-one conversations) that could be augmented with sharing academic writing resources (see above).
No matter your approach, taking time to explicitly teach these skills and allowing for students to have low-stakes practice with them is a good way to promote success for students.
Reviewing a Similarity Report will require educators to make many nuanced decisions to determine if the matches represent plagiarism or a false-positive score. A high score may not actually identify an instance of plagiarism, just as a low score may not actually signal complete authenticity.
For example, a high score may be caused by too many direct quotes that are accurately cited if the “exclude quoted text” option is unselected. Additionally, the student may benefit from guidance on how to select and use quotes appropriately to support their ideas or helping them develop their paraphrasing and summarizing skills. On the other hand, a low score may be attributed to a small section that is copied and pasted directly from a source that is not cited. Would this merit a code report, or would the student be better served by losing a few marks and receiving a warning?
While the Similarity software will provide you with a report that identifies where there are text matches, it will not indicate if those matches accurately represent examples of plagiarism. As an educator, the interpretation of the data and resulting decisions will be yours to make. Review the Enhanced Similarity Report guides to learn more about using these reports.
Consult the Academic Code of Conduct webpage for detailed information of Concordia’s policy.
When you enable Similarity for your assignment, take time with your students to explain how it works, what the report will indicate, and how you intend to interpret the report score. Some educators create a (reusable) short video tour for students or walk students through Turnitin’s explainer demo, report guide for educators, or explanation of the Similarity Score for students.
If you intend to make the Similarity Report available to students when they submit their work, it is important to clarify that a high overall similarity score does necessarily not indicate plagiarism. For example, a high score might result from students using a template provided by the educator, accurately cited quotes, or discipline-specific language and terms that are required by virtue of the assignment. In these circumstances, students might see a high similarity score and be concerned.
Alternately, it is possible to plagiarize a small segment of an assignment and receive a low similarity score. In this circumstance, considering only the overall similarity score might give a false sense of assurance that the work did not breach the academic code of conduct.
Technical support
- Guide to enable Turnitin Similarity in Moodle
- Turnitin help guides
- Email IITS support at help@concordia.ca
Resources
Concordia's academic code of conduct
Academic integrity is key to academic success at Concordia University. More specifically, “The integrity of University academic life and of the degrees, diplomas and certificates the University confers is dependent upon the honesty and soundness of the instructor student learning relationship and, in particular, that of the evaluation process. Therefore, for their part, all students are expected to be honest in all of their academic endeavours and relationships with the University.” (Academic Code of Conduct, Article 1)