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Academic
honesty and integrity are fundamental values in a community of scholars.
Doing your own work--and taking responsibility for that work--allows
you to test your own abilities and receive honest feedback. Honesty
and integrity within the University are fundamental to building
the trust that is required for students and faculty to build communities
of learning. Academic misconduct violates these fundamental principles.
At MSU, such misconduct has been described as:
- supplying
or using work or answers that are not your own;
- providing
or accepting assistance with completing assignments or examinations;
- interfering
through any means with another's academic work;
- faking data
or results.
From this, it's obvious that you can't--or at least shouldn't:
turn in an exam, paper, or project that is not wholly your own work;
copy answers from another student's exam or test;
get questions and/or answers from students who have already taken
an exam or quiz you are scheduled to take;
- work with
other students to create a common set of answers to problems without
your instructor's permission;
- have another
person take a test for you;
- submit the
same paper for two or more classes;
- download
answers to problems or projects and submit them as your own;
- collaborate
with other students on projects or assignments without your instructor's
permission.
Plagiarism is a particular
form of cheating that involves representing someone else's work as
your own. Reports of plagiarism have increased as students turn to
the Internet as a major source of data. "Cutting and pasting" is a
dangerous practice since it is easy to assume credit for someone else's
work. Plagiarism may include:
- copying
sentences or phrases from the work of another without a citation;
- using someone
else's original idea without citation;
- failing
to cite the source of data or facts;
- submitting
a borrowed, purchased, or downloaded paper.
Properly attributing the ideas, words, processes, and results of others
(that is, including a citation), demonstrates respect for another
scholar's work and effort.
The consequences of academic dishonesty can be rightfully painful.
If your instructor believes you have committed an act of academic
misconduct, s/he may issue a penalty grade, including, but not limited
to, a failing grade on the assignment or in the course. If your instructor
gives you a failing grade in the course, the MSU policy on "Integrity
of Scholarship and Grades" requires your instructor to send a letter
to your dean to explain the circumstances. Depending on the seriousness
and extent of the violation, the dean may call for a college-level
hearing to consider additional punishment against you. The hearing
board can impose sanctions which include issuing a warning, placing
you on warning probation, instituting disciplinary probation, or suspending
you.
To clarify policies and procedures concerning academic dishonesty
at Michigan State University, visit the Office of the Ombudsman at
MSU or the ombudsman's web site: http://www.msu.edu/unit/ombud/.
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