Glendale Community College Academic Code
of Honor
POLICY ON ACADEMIC HONESTY
College study is the process of acquainting students
with values and procedures central to scholarship. All students
are expected to do their own work. All forms of cheating and plagiarism
are absolutely forbidden. This is the official policy of Glendale
Community College.
The following behaviors serve as an operational description
of student violations of academic honesty:
- The student takes or copies answers from another
student or source or use unauthorized materials during a test.
- The student turns in an assignment (labs, art
projects, homework, prewritten or purchased papers, or work downloaded
from the Internet) which is not his/her own.
- The student uses words or ideas which are not
his/her own without acknowledgment of the source (plagiarism).
- The student knowingly deceives an instructor with
the intent to improve his/her standing in class.
- The student submits the same paper or project
previously submitted in another class without the permission of
the current instructor.
- The student depends upon tools or assistance prohibited
by the instructor in writing papers, preparing reports, solving
problems, or carrying out other assignments.
- The student acquires, without permission, tests
or other academic materials belonging to a member of the GCC faculty
or staff.
When a student engages in academic dishonesty, faculty
have the options of requiring the student to see a college counselor,
assigning a lower or failing (F) final grade in the course (or denying
promotion from a non-credit course.)
Violations of this policy will be reported to the
Executive Vice President of Instruction and will become part of
the Glendale College Cheating Incident file, unless the instructor
finds compelling reasons not to report a violation. The Executive
Vice President of Instruction may then impose sanctions authorized
by Administrative Regulation 5420. The sanctions include, but are
not limited to, issuing a reprimand, suspending the student for
up to ten days of instruction, and/or requesting a hearing by the
Campus Judicial Board to see if the student should be suspended,
or permanently expelled from the college.
The student has the right of due
process for all the above sanctions.
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