Title: Academic Integrity
1Academic Integrity
2Academic Integrity Northeastern University
- Academic integrity is integral to a successful
academic experience and important for two
reasons. First, independent and original
scholarship ensures that students derive the most
from their educational experience and the pursuit
of knowledge. Second, academic dishonesty
violates the most fundamental values of an
intellectual community and depreciates the
achievements of the entire educational community. - Used with permission March 2007 from the Office
of Student conduct and Conflict Resolution,
Academic Honesty and Integrity Policy.
Northeastern University, Boston, Ma. 2007 - http//www.neu.edu/oscrr/policy.html
3Rationale for academic integrity(as if it were
necessary!)
How strong Is your moral fiber? How proud
are you?
- When you copy, you cheat yourself.
- The consequences are never worth the risk and can
be life altering. - It is right to give credit where credit is due.
- Citing gives authority to the information you
present. - Citing makes it possible for your readers to
locate your source. (scholarship). - Joyce Valenza-Springfield Township High
School c. 2006
4Cheating includes, but is not limited to
- A.  Cheating An act or attempted act by which a
student deceives, acts dishonestly, or
misrepresents work that he/she has produced on an
academic exercise or attempts to, or assists
another to misrepresent his/her work. - 1. Providing or receiving information about all
or part of an exam, including answers (e.g.,
telling or texting someone in a subsequent period
what was on your exam, or being told this
information) - 2.  Copying from others
- 3.  Collaborating on a test, quiz, homework
assignment, or project with others without
authorization - 4.  Using unauthorized materials to complete an
exam or assignment - 5.  Programming of notes, formulas, or other aids
into a programmable calculator, electronic
dictionary, or other electronic device without
prior authorization - 6.  Using a communication device such as a cell
phone, pager, PDA, or electronic translator to
obtain or share unauthorized information during
an exam - 7.  Using online resources such as Web sites or
e-mail while completing an online exam or
in-class writing assignment without the
permission of the teacher
5Cheating includes, but is not limited to.
- 8.  Copying, or allowing another student to copy,
a computer file that contains another students
assignment, and submitting it, in part or in its
entirety, as ones own - 9.  Taking an exam for another student or
permitting someone else to take a test for you - 10.  Allowing others to do research, writing, or
completion of an assignment e.g., a. Using the
services of a commercial term paper company, b.Â
Using the services of another person (family
member, tutor, content expert, native speaker
etc.) inappropriately, without acknowledgement - 11. Submitting substantial portions of the same
academic work for credit in more than one course
without consulting the second teacher - 12. Using invented information or the
falsification of research or other findings. - 13. Submitting a paper or other academic
exercise of false or fictitious data, or
deliberately and knowingly distorting the true
nature, origin, or function of such data - 14. Changing, altering, or being an accessory to
the changing, or altering of a grade or an answer
on a graded test or assignment. - 15. Gaining or providing unauthorized access to
examination materials.
6Who cheats?
- Some of you do..
- A few of you dont
7Who cheats?
- A 2005 Center for Academic Integrity at Duke
University study found that 75 of high school
students admit to cheating, and if you include
copying homework that number shot to 90. - McCabe, D. Levels of Cheating and Plagiarism
Remain High. The Center for Academic Integrity.
2005. The Center for Academic Integrity. 08 Sept.
2008 h.asp.
8Excuses
I didnt understand the assignment.
I always cheat.
My parents expect As!
Its okay if I dont get caught!
Everyone does it!
I was too busy to write that paper! (Job, big
game, too much homework!)
This assignment was BORING!
Ive got to get into ??? U.!
My teachers expect too much!
No one cares
Joyce Valenza-Springfield Township High School c.
2006
9Plagiarism is cheating.
10Plagiarism
- B. Plagiarism The inclusion of anothers words,
ideas, data, or artistic productions as ones own
work. This covers unpublished as well as
published sources. - Plagiarism includes but is not limited to the
following examples - 1.  Quoting/using/cut and pasting another
persons words, sentences, paragraphs,
photographs, art, audio, video, or entire work
without acknowledgment of the source - 2.  Using another persons ideas, opinions,
theory, or structure without acknowledgment of
the source - 3.  Using resources on a task that is to be
completed without resources - 4. Listing sources in a bibliography that were
not used - 5. Submitting as your own any academic exercises
prepared totally or in part by another, when
collaboration is permitted (The acceptable terms
of the collaboration and expectations for each
student in the collaborative group will be
determined by the teacher).
11How do you avoid plagiarism?
- You must give credit (cite your source)
whenever you use. - Words, sentences, paragraphs, photographs, art,
media files that are not your own work - Another persons idea, opinion, or theory
- Any facts or statistics that are not common
knowledge - Actual quotations
- A paraphrase of facts, opinions, ideas, theory,
or quotations - Pictures or photographs that you have not taken
yourself. - (Writing Tutorial Services. 5 June 2003.
Indiana University. - 12 September 2005 mphlets/
- plagiarism.shtml
12So what happens if you are suspected of
cheating or plagiarizing?
- You will meet with the teacher and provide
sufficient testimony or documentation to show
that you did not cheat and/or plagiarize. - Range of consequences include
- Warnings or Violations
- A verbal warning to student, and a written
warning or violation submitted to the Academic
Integrity Board. - In the case of a warning the students Assistant
Principal will also be notified, and the
assignment or test will receive a grade reduction
or a zero. - In the case of a violation, the
parent(s)/guardian(s), the students principal,
the students counselor, and a National Honor
Society advisor will be notified, and the
assignment or test will receive a grade reduction
or a zero. - After the third cumulative warning, parents will
be notified by a member of the Academic Integrity
board. 3 warningsviolation - The National Honor Society advisor will be
notified about multiple warnings a student
receives.
13What do these people have in common?
- Senator John McCain
- Senator Joe Biden
- Senator Barack Obama
- Governor Sarah Palin
14They all plagiarized
- John McCain paraphrased Wikipedia when describing
the crisis in Georgia (without giving credit and
was caught by an editor). - Joe Biden paraphrased (badly) a speech by the
head of the British Labor Party in 1987 in his
bid to be the Democratic nominee (the discovery
cost him the nomination) - Barack Obama paraphrased a speech by Deval
Patrick-just words - Sarah Palin used a line from a National Review
columnist in her acceptance speech without giving
credit
15Real life consequences
- 6/2008. Naperville Principal Jim Caudill, who has
been with the school district for 34 years, won't
be returning as principal in the fall. He used
verbatim a commencement address from a student
who gave it 11 years earlier. - 6/2008.Naperville Central High School
valedictorian Steven Hankong Su plagiarized his
graduation speech, using a column from The Onion.
- 8/1998. Mike Barnicle was forced to resign for
plagiarism in his columns. - 11/2002. In a probe of plagiarism at UVA--45
students were expelled, 3 graduate degrees
revoked. - 5/2006 Raytheon directors punished the chief
executive, William H. Swanson, by taking away
almost 1 million from his 2006 compensation
yesterday because he failed to give credit for
material that was in a management book he wrote. -
16Cheating and Workplace Property Deviance
of Cheaters in High School and College who..
Graves, Sharon M. Student Cheating Habits a
Predictor of Workplace Deviance. Journal of
Diversity Management. First Quarter 2008. The
Clute Institute. 08 Sept. 08 http//www.cluteinsti
tute-onlinejournals.com/PDFs/571.pdf
17Cheating and Workplace Productivity Deviance
of Cheaters in High School and College who..
Graves, Sharon M. Student Cheating Habits a
Predictor of Workplace Deviance. Journal of
Diversity Management. First Quarter 2008. The
Clute Institute. 08 Sept. 08 http//www.cluteinsti
tute-onlinejournals.com/PDFs/571.pdf
18University Sanctions
- UMass-failing grade, failing course, suspension,
or expulsion. - MIT-probation, suspension, expulsion
- Brandeis-failing grade, transcript, suspension,
expulsion - Northeastern-suspension, expulsion, fines,
community service - Middlesex Community College-Immediate dismissal.
19A Plagiarism Tutorial
- http//library.acadiau.ca/tutorials/plagiarism/