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Academic Integrity
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Academic Integrity

Feb 23, 2016

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Academic Integrity. What is integrity? What do you think “academic integrity” means?. Academic Integrity. P rinciples (values, morals, ethics) to which one is held regarding academics - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Academic Integrity

Academic Integrity

Page 2: Academic Integrity

What is integrity?

What do you think “academic integrity”

means?

Page 3: Academic Integrity

Academic Integrity• Principles (values, morals, ethics) to which one is held

regarding academics

• Most colleges have a clearly defined academic integrity policy, although the details vary at different schools– Formal name (e.g., Honor Code, Honor System, Academic

Integrity Policy, Code of Conduct, etc.)– Specific regulations (e.g., types of violations, process for

reporting violations, etc.)– Consequences (e.g., types of sanctions, severity of

sanctions, etc.)

Page 4: Academic Integrity

Honor Code / Code of Conduct

• Set of rules and expectations governing students and faculty

• Defines honorable/acceptable behavior and dishonorable/unacceptable behavior

• Communicates importance of academic integrity to the school community

• May include non-academic expectations in addition to academic-related rules

Page 5: Academic Integrity

Academic Integrity Violations

Page 6: Academic Integrity

Cheating

• Using unauthorized materials or methods• Receiving (or giving) unauthorized assistance• Receiving (or giving) unfair advantage

• Can apply to any requirement, not just tests

• Examples– Copying homework or worksheet– Referring to textbook during online quiz– Telling a friend what’s on a test you took early

Page 7: Academic Integrity

Plagiarism

• Representing another person’s work as your own; can apply to:– Ideas, thoughts– Language, direct quotes, phrasing– Structure, organization

• You must attribute everything you use that’s not original and cite the source

• Universities are increasingly using technology to detect and prevent plagiarism

Page 8: Academic Integrity

Falsification

• Spoken or written untruths

• a.k.a. fabrication or misrepresentation

• Applies to coursework, emails, conversations, documents, and more

Page 9: Academic Integrity

Other Violations

• Unauthorized collaboration

• Compromising the security or integrity of an exam, assignment, or grading process

• Helping others to violate a policy in the code

• Failure to report a known violation

• Attempting to violate a policy in the code

Page 10: Academic Integrity

Possible Sanctions

• Sanctions may come from the professor and/or the university

• Failing grade (on assignment and/or in course)• Educational assignment/program• Loss of privileges• Community service• Counseling• Probation, suspension, or expulsion

Page 11: Academic Integrity

Why is academic integrity

important?