
Academic Integrity and Academic Misconduct (Elva)
Authored by Elva Li
English
1st Grade
CCSS covered
Used 9+ times

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7 questions
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1.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
2 mins • 1 pt
3. You are given a take home exam with instructions not to use your notes, textbook or any other outside sources while completing the exam. You are having difficulty figuring out the answer to a couple of problems. Your roommate is in the class as well, and you discuss the topic with her, but don’t discuss specific questions.
A. There is no problem with this scenario.
B. You and your roommate are responsible for cheating for collaborating with another person without authorization.
C. Your roommate is responsible for cheating because she started the conversation about the exam. You are not responsible.
D. The exam was extremely difficult, and you know that everyone else worked on the test together so you feel that your actions are justified.
Tags
CCSS.RI.1.9
CCSS.RI.2.9
CCSS.RI.4.8
CCSS.RL.1.5
CCSS.RL.4.5
2.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
2. You are working on an exam in class when the professor says the exam is finished. You continue to work on the exam.
A. You are responsible for academic misconduct for continuing to work on an assignment after the allotted time has elapsed.
B. You arrived to class 10 minutes late and plan to continue to work for an extra 10 minutes so that you have the same amount of time as everyone else. After all, this is only fair!
C. The person next to you continued to work so you felt entitled to do the same. What is good for one should be good for all.
D. This is not academic misconduct.
Tags
CCSS.RI.1.9
CCSS.RI.2.9
CCSS.RI.4.8
CCSS.RL.1.5
CCSS.RL.4.5
3.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
4. You are preparing a lab report and are not coming up with what you know to be the correct answers. You continue to figure out your calculations hoping that you have just made a calculation mistake. After a few tries, you determine that the problem just isn’t working out. You decide to fudge some of the numbers so that you get what you know to be the correct answer.
A. You are responsible for academic misconduct.
B. You believe that if the professor realizes that you falsified the numbers to get the correct answer, he will understand that you at least tried and that is all that counts.
C. You are responsible for fabrication.
D. This course has nothing to do with your future career goals so what is the sense of mastering the course.
Tags
CCSS.RI.1.9
CCSS.RI.2.9
CCSS.RI.4.8
CCSS.RL.1.5
CCSS.RL.4.5
4.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
5. Your professor allows you to bring in one sheet of paper (8 ½ x 11, one-sided only) with formulas, notes, etc. which you may use during an exam. You type up four pages of information, then print them four to a page, ending up with only one sheet of paper. This would be an example of which of the following?
A. This is an example of cheating.
B. This is an example of academic misconduct
C. This is an example of fabrication.
D. This is not a violation of the Academic Honesty Policy because the faculty member did not mention how large (or small) the print could to be.
Tags
CCSS.RI.3.5
CCSS.RL.4.1
CCSS.RL.5.1
CCSS.RL.9-10.9
5.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
6. Odessa is retaking a class. This term the class is being taught by the same instructor, and he’s using the same assignments. Odessa has her graded assignments from last time, and rather than redoing the work, she just copies her correct answers into her solutions for this term.
(from:http://u.arizona.edu/~mccann/classes/adslides.pdf)
(a) Odessa is committing academic dishonesty by reusing answers from her old assignments.
(b) Odessa is doing nothing improper; she created those answers herself.
Tags
CCSS.RL.5.6
6.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
7.Roderick’s program is too slow. His assignment is to write a program to solve a particular problem in fewer steps than does the instructor’s sample solution. Nothing Roderick has tried has even come close to besting the sample solution’s performance. In desperation, Roderick changes his program’s output to report a number of steps that is just a bit below the number required by the sample solution.
(from:http://u.arizona.edu/~mccann/classes/adslides.pdf)
(a) Roderick is committing academic dishonesty by falsifying his program’s performance.
(b) Roderick’s program might have needed fewer steps if he’d tried running it enough times. By changing the result, he’s just saving time, saving electricity, and reducing his carbon footprint. Isn’t that more important?
Tags
CCSS.RI.1.9
CCSS.RI.2.9
CCSS.RI.4.8
CCSS.RL.1.5
CCSS.RL.4.5
7.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
1. Plagiarism is defined as _____.
A. Interfering with the work of others
B. Helping another person with academic dishonesty
C. Using the work of others without acknowledging the source
D. Impersonation of others
Tags
CCSS.RI.3.5
CCSS.RL.4.1
CCSS.RL.5.1
CCSS.RL.9-10.9
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