Honor Code
- The Honor Code is an undertaking of the students, individually and collectively:
- that they will not give or receive aid in examinations; that they will not give or receive
unpermitted aid in class work, in the preparation of reports, or in any other work that is to be
used by the instructor as the basis of grading;
- that they will do their share and take an active part in seeing to it that others as well as
themselves uphold the spirit and letter of the Honor Code.
-
The faculty on its part manifests its confidence in the honor of its students by refraining from
proctoring examinations and from taking unusual and unreasonable precautions to prevent the
forms of dishonesty mentioned above.
-
While the faculty alone has the right and obligation to set academic requirements, the students and
faculty will work together to establish optimal conditions for honorable academic work.
Examples of conduct which have been regarded as being in violation of the Honor Code include:
- Copying from another's examination paper or allowing another to copy from one's own paper
- Unpermitted collaboration
- Plagiarism
- Revising and resubmitting a quiz or exam for regrading, without the instructor's knowledge and
consent
- Giving or receiving unpermitted aid on a take-home examination
- Representing as one's own work the work of another
- Giving or receiving aid on an academic assignment under circumstances in which a reasonable
person should have known that such aid was not permitted
Violation of the Honor Code will result in a penalty. The standard
penalty for a first offense includes a 0 grade for the course in
which the violation occurred. The standard penalty for a multiple
violation (e.g., cheating more than once in the same course) is a
one-year suspension.
Adapted from the Stanford Honor Code
Last modified: Wed Nov 5 13:14:14 IST 2008