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intellectual Property and Academic Integrity Guidelines (redirected from intellectual Property Guidelines)

Page history last edited by Alan Liu 3 years, 3 months ago

 

English 25,"Literature and the Information, Media, and Communication Revolutions" (Spring 2020, Professor Alan Liu)

 

["X" or Experimental Version of Course for Online Instruction Only. See also supplementary Gauchospace site supporting this course.]

 

Copyright

 

 

Fair Use

 

Plagiarism (and Other Academic Dishonesty)

  • Plagiarism (along with other forms of academic dishonesty) is one of the most serious offenses in an academic community. The UCSB Office of Student Conduct defines "cheating, ""plagiarism," "furnishing false information," "collusion," and "misuse of course materials" in its short online guide on Academic Integrity.  Excerpts from the guide:

 

Plagiarism

  • Taking credit for any work created by another person including, but not limited to, books, articles, methodology, results, compositions, images, lectures, computer programs, or internet postings  
  • Copying any work belonging to another person without indicating that the information is copied and properly citing the source of the work
  • Creating false citations that do not correspond to the information you have used

 

Collusion

  • Working together on graded coursework without instructor permission
  • Working with another student beyond the limits set by the instructor
  • Providing or obtaining unauthorized assistance on graded coursework

 

Cheating

  • Copying or attempting to copy from another student, allowing another student to copy, or unauthorized collaboration with another student
  • Using any unauthorized material such as notes, cheat sheets, or electronic devices during an exam
  • Looking at another student’s exam
  • Talking, texting, or communicating during an exam
  • Submitting altered graded assignments or exams for additional credit
  • Bringing pre-written answers to an exam
  • Having another person take an exam for you, or taking an exam for another student
  • Signing an absent student in for attendance, or allowing a fellow student to do the same for you
  • Unexcused exit and re-entry during an exam period

 

--Excerpted from Academic Integrity (UCSB Office of Student Contduct)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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