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Subsections

Academic Violations

The first and all subsequent violations of academic integrity will immediately result in a grade of F for the course.

Among the possible violations are cheating, counterfeit work (submitting work created or produced by others including submitting joint work as one's own), and plagiarism. Not listing the name of a collaborator will be deemed cheating. Similarly, copying another person's work and representing it as one's own work is a violation.

There has been much recent work on automatic detection of plagiarism. Your assignments may be checked using these tools. Among these are plagiarism.org and Glatt Plagiarism Services. Detection of plagiarism by these tools will be considered sufficient evidence of a violation of academic integrity.

You are also expected to abide by the Trinity Code of Ethics for Computing.

If you cannot abide by these rules, do not take this course from me.

Security of Your Work

You are responsible for ensuring the security of your work. This includes both physical and electronic copies. Even though the Trinity Code of Ethics for Computing prohibits unauthorized access to your computer files, you are responsible for ensuring they are adequately protected. For information how to restrict access to your Trinity CS computer files, see File Security Tutorial.


next up previous
Next: Disabilities Up: Computer Science 1321 Course Syllabus Previous: Assignments and Grades

2000-01-13