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User:Aaronshaw/Course policies
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=== Academic integrity === Students in my courses are required to comply with the policies found in the booklet, "[https://www.northwestern.edu/provost/policies/academic-integrity/academic-integrity-guide-20201.pdf Academic Integrity at Northwestern University: A Basic Guide]." All papers submitted for credit in this course must be submitted electronically unless otherwise instructed by the professor. Your written work may be tested for plagiarized content. Any form of cheating, ''including improper or undisclosed use of content generated by artificial intelligence'', constitutes a violation of Northwestern’s academic integrity policy. For details regarding academic integrity at Northwestern or to download the guide, visit [https://www.northwestern.edu/provost/policies/academic-integrity/index.html the office of the provost's page on academic integrity]. The University's standards of academic integrity cannot be listed exhaustively, but the following examples represent some types of behavior that are unacceptable: cheating, plagiarism, fabrication, obtaining an unfair advantage, aiding and abetting academic dishonesty, falsification of records and official documents, unauthorized access to computerized academic or administrative records or systems. Some basic principles to keep in mind: * If you rely on someone else’s ideas or information, cite your source. * If you use someone else’s or words derived from AI, enclose those words in quotation marks and cite your source. Taking someone else’s prose, modifying it slightly, and passing it off as your own is never appropriate, even if you include a footnote. * You may not turn in work that is identical to or derivative of work you have turned in for another class without both prior permission and a clear accounting of what is old and what is new. Personally, I expect students and colleagues to exceed the minimal standards elaborated in these basic principles and university statements. I encourage you to strive for admirable, extraordinary conduct in every aspect of your academic career. Feel free to ask me for clarification about this or related matters. For more information, visit: * [https://www.northwestern.edu/provost/policies/academic-integrity/index.html Academic Integrity — Office of the Provost] * [https://www.tgs.northwestern.edu/academic-policies-procedures/policies/academic-integrity.html Academic Integrity — The Graduate School] * [https://advising.soc.northwestern.edu/registration-and-policies/academic-integrity/ Academic Integrity – School of Communication Undergraduate Advising]
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