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Academic Integrity Policy

In accordance with the mission statement at Piedmont College, it is the responsibility of each member of the Piedmont community to promote an atmosphere of academic integrity and an understanding of intellectual honesty that adheres to the highest standards of professional and personal conduct.

To protect intellectual and scholarly integrity, the College imposes strict penalties for academic dishonesty, which is defined as follows.

  • Cheating — intentionally using or attempting to use unauthorized materials, information or study aids in any academic exercise.
  • Fabrication — intentional and unauthorized invention or falsification of any information or citation in an academic exercise or altering official college records or documents.
  • Deception – intentionally providing false information to an instructor or other academic administrator about an academic matter in order to achieve an unmerited advantage.
  • Facilitating academic dishonesty — intentionally or knowingly helping or attempting to help another to commit an act of academic dishonesty.
  • Plagiarism — intentionally or knowingly representing the words or ideas of another as one’s own in any academic exercise.
  • Collusion – intentionally working in collaboration with others on an assignment intended to represent a single student’s work; or, improving or editing another’s completed work to the extent that the nature and quality of the original work is significantly altered.

Examples of Collusion

Collusion occurs when work presented as a students' individual work has been intentionally developed with the assistance of others. Absent specific authorization from the course instructor, each academic exercise or assignment is presumed to be prepared and submitted by one student acting individually and not together with others.

This doesn't mean that students can't study in groups and learn from one another, nor does it mean that students cannot ask for advice about how to accomplish an assignment from Academic Support or the Library. However, the result that is the required/graded submission must represent the student's individual thought and effort, unless the assignment was to produce a group's collaborative work.

 

Collusion

Cooperation

Planning a response together; copying a plan for an individual assessment.

Analyzing the assessment question together.

Paraphrasing someone else's assignment and submitting it as your own.

Practicing paraphrasing skills together and sharing tips.

Relying on some group members to do all the work.

Sharing work evenly among group members.

Getting someone else to do your assessment task.

Getting help from an academic support tutor

Remember, you are guilty of collusion when you are copying someone else's work or letting someone else copy your work.

 

 

Collusion occurs when you work without the authorization of your instructor to:

  • work with one or more people to prepare and produce work
  • allow others to copy your work or share your answer to an assessment task
  • allow someone else to write or edit your work (an exception is receiving assistance from academic support or student success)
  • write or edit work for another student
  • offer to complete work or seek payment for completing academic work for other students.

Examples of Deception

  • Giving a false excuse for missing a project deadline;
  • Claiming to have submitted coursework that one did not actually submit;
  • Taking an exam or submitting coursework on behalf of someone else, especially when using their personally identifying credentials to do so.
  • Forging an advisor's or instructor's signature on an academic form.