PART D - Code of Practice for Academic Honesty
23. Introduction
This Code of Practice sets out the general responsibilities of the University, Faculties, Schools, individual academic staff and students to ensure that academic honesty is fostered as a core value of the University.
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24. Responsibility of University
The University will:
(a) ensure that its policies and procedures on academic honesty are publicised and accessible to academic staff and students;
(b) ensure that its policies and procedures on academic honesty are implemented, applied consistently across all Faculties, and their implementation monitored;
(c) promote best practice in the detection of academic dishonesty; and
(d)ensure equity of all processes pertaining to academic honesty.
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25. Responsibilities of Faculties
25.1 Each Faculty will:
(a) develop strategies to ensure the implementation of the Academic Honesty Policy;
(b) establish and maintain appropriate procedures to oversee and monitor School and Faculty implementation of University policy, and Faculty and School procedures on academic honesty.
25.2 Once per year, each Faculty will prepare a report to the Faculty Board on:
(a) School strategies for promoting academic honesty;
(b) the number of cases of academic dishonesty which have been handled in the relevant reporting period; and
(c) the manner in which breaches of academic honesty have been dealt with by Schools within the Faculty.
25.3 A report from each Faculty Board will be submitted to Academic Board annually.
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26. Responsibilities of Schools
Each School will:
(a) inform students of their requirements by providing style guides for the presentation of assignments and other assessment tasks. These must specify the styles of writing appropriate for different tasks and the form/s of referencing required for each task;
(b) ensure that all academic staff are aware of the need to introduce and reinforce student understanding of the professional and academic skills required at all course levels;
(c) ensure that all academic staff are aware of, and provide advice to students regarding, the available sources of assistance for students seeking to develop their skills in academic writing and, in particular, preparation and presentation of assignments and other assessment tasks;
(d) incorporate material into first year courses that will assist students to understand the meaning and practical application of academic honesty;
(e) ensure that relevant School publications (printed and electronic) include statements which:
- make it clear that plagiarism, collusion, recycling and other forms of academic dishonesty are unacceptable;
- provide clear guidelines outlining what constitutes legitimate co-operation and collaboration, where it is encouraged and where it is prohibited;
- provide clear guidelines on groupwork, especially concerning assessment and division of tasks among group members and monitoring of groupwork by academic staff, to ensure fair assessment;
(f) implement appropriate security practices for submission and return of assessment tasks; and
(g) maintain a register of warnings issued regarding academic dishonesty.
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27. Responsibilities of academic staff
Academic staff will:
(a) ensure that they are familiar with current University policies and Faculty and School procedures with respect to academic honesty, and apply them consistently;
(b) design a realistic assessment regime, preferably one which is coordinated across the course to prevent undue workload pressure on students at key times of the academic year;
(c) clearly explain in Unit Outlines academic expectations, writing protocols and referencing styles appropriate to the particular academic discipline and to required assessment tasks;
(d) provide feedback to and be available for consultation with students, identifying gaps in knowledge and learning skills, and referring students to appropriate sources of assistance to improve these skills;
(e) provide appropriate conditions for groupwork and make clear to students the distinction between groupwork, levels of legitimate co-operation and collaboration, and requirements for individual work;
(f) be aware of and responsive to different cultural backgrounds of students, especially in relation to the use of the work of others and to writing skills; and
(g) provide students with early notification and fair warning if they believe any individual or group may be at risk of breaching academic honesty standards.
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28. Rights of students
Students have a right to:
(a) have access to University policies and Faculty and School procedures with regard to academic honesty;
(b) be provided with clear guidelines on academic writing and referencing styles required in each School/discipline;
(c) be provided with clear information on assessment requirements in each Unit Outline, especially concerning aspects involving individual and/or collective assessment;
(d) be provided with clear guidelines relating to all aspects of groupwork, its operation, monitoring and assessment;
(e) be provided with clear guidelines on the level of co-operation and collaboration permitted within each assessment component;
(f) expect consistent application of academic honesty policies and practices at University, Faculty and School levels;
(g) receive feedback which assists them to review their work;
(h) receive early notification or fair warning in any case in which an academic believes a student or group of students may be at risk of breaching the University’s standards of academic honesty; and
(i) participate in appropriate learning experiences which are offered in order to improve their competency in writing and study skills, understanding of the requirements of group work, and development of personal attributes, in particular, ethical behaviour.
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29. Responsibilities of students
Students have a responsibility to:
(a) become familiar with University policies and procedures which govern the conduct of students within the University and to conduct themselves in a manner which is consistent with those policies and procedures;
(b) understand and act in accordance with the University’s published principles of academic honesty in the preparation, conduct and submission of assessment tasks;
(c) seek clarification, if necessary, to ensure they clearly understand assessment conditions and requirements, and appropriate writing, referencing and assessment practice in their units and course(s);
(d) submit only work which is their own, or which properly acknowledges the thoughts, ideas, findings and/or work of others; for example:
- state clearly in the appropriate form where they found any material on which they have based their work, using the referencing system described in the Unit Outline;
- acknowledge the people whose thoughts, ideas, experimental works, conclusions, drawings, designs, data, computer programs or other creative work they have extracted, developed, or summarised, even if they put these into their own words, data or designs;
- avoid excessive copying of passages or works of another author, even where the source is acknowledged. The student should use another form of words to show that the student has thought about the material and understood it, but state clearly where they found the ideas;
(e) seek assistance from appropriate sources to remedy any identified deficiencies in their academic skills;
(f) avoid lending or sharing original work to or with others for any reason; and
(g) retain materials which would demonstrate evidence of their authorship of assessable work, eg record of library borrowings, addresses of internet sites accessed, notes compiled, drafts of an assessment task.
Australian Catholic University acknowledges its adaptation of elements of the policies and procedures of other universities, including in particular the University of Sydney, Macquarie University and the University of Newcastle, in formulating its Academic Honesty Policy and Procedures.
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See also:
Page last updated: 2017-06-28
Short url: https://handbook.acu.edu.au/53211
Page last updated: 2017-06-28
Short url: https://handbook.acu.edu.au/53211