Code of Academic Integrity
Since the University is an academic community, its fundamental
purpose is the pursuit of knowledge. Essential to the success of
this educational mission is a commitment to the principles of academic
integrity. Every member of the University community is responsible
for upholding the highest standards of honesty at all times. Students,
as members of the community, are also responsible for adhering to
the principles and spirit of the following Code of Academic Integrity.
Academic Dishonesty Definitions
Activities, that have the effect or intention of interfering with
education, pursuit of knowledge, or fair evaluation of a student’s
performance are prohibited. Examples of such activities include
but are not limited to the following definitions:
- A. Cheating: using or attempting to use unauthorized assistance,
material, or study aids in examinations or other academic work
or preventing, or attempting to prevent, another from using authorized
assistance, material, or study aids. Example: using a cheat sheet
in a quiz or exam, altering a graded exam and resubmitting it
for a better grade, etc.
- B. Plagiarism: using the ideas, data, or language of another
without specific or proper acknowledgment. Example: copying another
person’s paper, article, or computer work and submitting it for
an assignment, cloning someone else’s ideas without attribution,
failing to use quotation marks where appropriate, etc.
- C. Fabrication: submitting contrived or altered information
in any academic exercise. Example: making up data for an experiment,
fudging data, citing nonexistent articles, contriving sources,
etc.
- D. Multiple submission: submitting, without prior permission,
any work submitted to fulfill another academic requirement.
- E. Misrepresentation of academic records: misrepresenting or
tampering with or attempting to tamper with any portion of a student’s
transcripts or academic record, either before or after coming
to the University of Pennsylvania. Example: forging a change of
grade slip, tampering with computer records, falsifying academic
information on one’s resume, etc.
- F. Facilitating academic dishonesty: knowingly helping or attempting
to help another violate any provision of the Code. Example: working
together on a take-home exam, etc.
- G. Unfair advantage: attempting to gain unauthorized advantage
over fellow students in an academic exercise. Example: gaining
or providing unauthorized access to examination materials, obstructing
or interfering with another student’s efforts in an academic exercise,
lying about a need for an extension for an exam or paper, continuing
to write even when time is up during an exam, destroying or keeping
library materials for one’s own use., etc.
* If a student is unsure whether his action(s) constitute a violation
of the Code of Academic Integrity, then it is that student’s responsibility
to consult with the instructor to clarify any ambiguities.
(Source: Office of the Provost, 1996)
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