While
most academic issues are covered in the catalogue, the concepts of academic
honesty and its flip side, plagiarism, are essential
to education. The following is the CollegeŐs official statement on
plagiarism.
Education
and the growth of human knowledge depend upon
the interaction of human minds. To collaborate
in learning, both with experts and with peers, is a necessary and valuable
activity. It is no more legitimate to steal the
product of another personŐs mental labor, however, than it is to steal the
product of his or her physical labor. Money buys the use of material goods;
documentation and acknowledgment are legal tender
in the world of ideas.
Plagiarism, a word derived from the Latin word
for kidnapper, covers a wide spectrum of dishonest uses of the products of
anotherŐs intellectual labor. The most blatant plagiarism is outright copying of someone elseŐs work, whether from
a book or from another student, and passing it off as your own.
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It
is also dishonest to paraphrase or summarize or
even
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adopt occasional apt phrases
from another writer unless you give credit to your source.
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To follow anotherŐs line of reasoning without indicating the source of that thought
process is also plagiarism.
Plagiarism, cheating, using the work of another
student as your own (including material stored on the computer), and other
forms of academic dishonesty are serious offenses. Submitting
the same work in more than one course without the permission of the instructors
is a form of academic dishonesty, as is enrollment, without the permission of
the instructors, in two classes that have the same class meeting times (or
overlap at all). For the first offense, the instructor may dismiss the offender
from the course with a mark of F and will report the case to the department
chair and the dean of students, who may impose other or additional penalties,
including suspension or expulsion. This report becomes part of the studentŐs
confidential file and is destroyed upon graduation. A second offense
automatically leads to suspension or expulsion. Students may not drop or
withdraw from a course in which they have been found guilty of academic
dishonesty. A student is entitled to appeal to the Appeals Board, within seven
days of receipt of the letter of notification, charges of academic dishonesty.
The decision of the board will be final and binding unless overruled by the
president of the College, who has final authority and responsibility.
The College also views misrepresentations to faculty, within the
context of a course, as a form of academic dishonesty. Students lying to or otherwise
deceiving faculty are subject to dismissal from the course with a grade of F,
as well as possible additional disciplinary action.
Student accountability for
academic dishonesty extends beyond the end of a semester and even after
graduation. If Colby determines, following the completing of a course or after
the awarding of a Colby degree, that academic dishonesty has occurred, the
College may change the studentŐs grade and rescind credit for the course, and
/or revoke the Colby degree.