Academic Integrity Teaching Resources
Academic Integrity Teaching Resources
Academic Integrity Teaching Resources
Professors have an important responsibility to build a culture of trust and honesty in the classroom to support academic integrity. Learn what you need to know to create this environment, about violations, how to prevent violations, and what to do if you suspect a student of a violation. These teaching tools will help your students gain the skills they’ll need in school and in the workplace.
Academic Integrity at Rowan
- Rowan Faculty Handbook on Academic Integrity
- Academic Integrity At Rowan: Your Education, Your Future: Student Information
- Academic Integrity At Rowan: Faculty Information Note: Need to login with Rowan credentials
- Rowan Academic Integrity Policy
- Strategies for prevention - from Academic Affairs
- Report a Suspected Violation Note: Need to login with Rowan credentials
- Academic Integrity Workshop Virtual Session (1/11/2022) - Recording
- Academic Integrity Overview Video by Stephen Fleming (12/2021) (4:52) provides an overview of Academic Integrity including its definition, the various types of academic integrity violations, and their definitions as described within Rowan’s Academic Integrity Policy. Dr. Fleming is the Associate Dean of the College of Humanities and Social Sciences.
- RTC Spring 2021 Conference Part 1: Academic Integrity Violations and PREVENTION Strategies (4/9/2021)
- After the opening is a presentation, "Building a Culture of Trust," by Allison Kelly, PhD., lecturer in the Chemistry/Biochemistry Department. Allison will point out that prevention strategies are the first step, and will share conversations she's had with students about learning, growth mindset, and where she draws the line.
Allison Kelly's Presentation: Building a Culture of Trust (pdf) ~ WebEx Recording
- After the opening is a presentation, "Building a Culture of Trust," by Allison Kelly, PhD., lecturer in the Chemistry/Biochemistry Department. Allison will point out that prevention strategies are the first step, and will share conversations she's had with students about learning, growth mindset, and where she draws the line.
- Spring 2021 Conference Part 2: Academic Integrity Violations and RESPONSE Strategies (4/30/2021)
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This session featured presentations from Eve Sledjeski (Assistant Professor, Psychology), who spoke about how faculty can best prepare to report an Academic Integrity Violation, and Tricia Yurak (Associate Provost for Academic Affairs), who spoke about the AIV board hearing process and current academic integrity trends at Rowan. WebEx RecordingEve Sledjeski's presentation: Submitting an AIV Report (pdf)Trish Yurak's presentation: Academic Integrity at Rowan University (pdf)
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General Resources
- International Center for Academic Integrity - The International Center for Academic Integrity (ICAI) cultivates integrity in academic communities throughout the world to promote ethical institutions and societies. ICAI offers assessment services, resources, and consultations to its member institutions, and facilitates critical conversations about integrity.
- Understanding and Applying the Six Values of Academic Integrity in all Aspects of our Teaching Learning Roles and Experiences
- Promoting Academic Integrity in Online Education (pdf) - 9 articles
Promoting Academic Integrity
- Academic Honesty Self-Test - to use this site with your students, we suggest having the students take a screen shot of their final score with the date & time in the screenshot to verify they completed the self-test.
- IDOA Student Committee’s Jeopardy on Contract Cheating: A review and helpful guide to using the game
- How to Avoid Academic Irresponsibility: Tips for Students
General Prevention Tips
Academic Misconduct
Academic Misconduct includes the alteration of grades; involvement in the acquisition or distribution of unadministered tests; and the unauthorized submission of student work in more than one class.
- Academic Misconduct - (2018) (5:42)
Cheating
Cheating is an act of deception by which a person misrepresents his or her mastery of material on a test or other academic exercise.
Fabrication
Fabrication refers to the deliberate use of invented information or the falsification of research or other findings with the intent to deceive.
- Fabrication or Falsification - from NIU
Plagiarism
Plagiarism occurs when a person represents someone else's words, ideas, phrases, sentences, or data as one's own work. When submitting work that includes someone else's words, ideas, syntax, data, computer code, visual images, or other non-textual materials, or organizational patterns, the source of that information must be acknowledged through complete, accurate and specific references. All verbatim statements must be acknowledged through quotation marks and in proper citations.
- Plagiarize-Proof Your Writing Assignments
- Can I Use that Picture? The Terms, Laws, and Ethics for Using Copyrighted Images
- Defining and Avoiding Plagiarism: WPA Statement on Best Practices
- Anti-Plagiarism Strategies for Research Papers
- A High Percentage of Fear? Using Turnitin and other Plagiarism Detection Software to Deter Plagiarism without Increasing Student Anxiety
Updated 3/27/23