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Procedures for Cases of Alleged Dishonesty
I. Initiation
of a Compliant
A. All cases of alleged academic dishonesty by students
in undergraduate courses in the School of Continuing Studies
must be referred to the Assistant Dean for Undergraduate
and Credit Professional Programs. Cases should be referred
within one month of the date of the alleged incident, or
within one month of the date the reporting individual becomes
aware of the alleged incident, whichever is later. However,
no action will be taken on any case if more than one year
has elapsed since the alleged incident. Once a matter has
been referred to the Assistant Dean for Undergraduate and
Credit Professional Programs, it may not be withdrawn without
the Assistant Dean’s approval, nor may the referring
faculty member resolve the case without the Assistant Dean’s
approval.
B. The Assistant Dean for Undergraduate and Credit Professional
Programs shall review the facts of the alleged incident,
including statements of the reporting individual, the instructor(s),
and any supporting material. The review process may include
electronic searches of plagiarism resources, web sites,
computer network traffic logs, and other databases. If,
after the review, the Assistant Dean for Undergraduate
and Credit Professional Programs determines that there
is cause for further investigation, he or she shall notify
the student by letter of the date of the incident (if known),
the course and instructor, and the nature of the alleged
violation. A copy of the current procedures will accompany
the letter.
The student will be asked to make an appointment with the Assistant Dean for
Undergraduate and Credit Professional Programs to discuss the case within seven
working days of the date of the letter, at which time the student may present
any relevant material or statements on his or her behalf. The student will
have the right, prior to meeting with the Assistant Dean for Undergraduate
and Credit Professional Programs, to review relevant original materials in
the School of Continuing Studies, to obtain copies of such materials if desired,
and to discuss the matter with an adviser or other relevant individual. Review
of original materials must take place by appointment during normal working
hours at the School of Continuing Studies within seven working days of the
date of the Assistant Dean’s letter.
If the student does not schedule a meeting to take place within seven working
days, the Assistant Dean for Undergraduate and Credit Professional Programs
may make his/her determination on the basis of the evidence before him/her
at that time. The Assistant Dean for Undergraduate and Credit Professional
Programs may grant reasonable requests for an extension of this time deadline
in his/her sole discretion.
C. In certain cases where timely notification is important, verbal notification
of the alleged violation may be made, but such verbal notification will be
followed by a letter.
II. Meeting with the Assistant Dean
A. In meeting with the student, the Assistant Dean for
Undergraduate and Credit Professional Programs will
describe the charges made and detail the evidence
supporting those charges. At this initial meeting, the student may decline
to discuss the matter and/or request that the Assistant Dean for Undergraduate
and Credit Professional Programs defer making a determination until after
a subsequent meeting between the student and the Assistant
Dean for Undergraduate
and Credit Professional Programs, at which the student may present relevant
information or evidence. This second meeting must be requested at the initial
meeting and must be scheduled for a time within seven working days of the
initial meeting.
B. The Assistant Dean for Undergraduate and Credit Professional
Programs has the authority to determine, based on a preponderance
of the evidence available to the Assistant Dean for Undergraduate
and Credit Professional Programs, whether a violation of
academic integrity has occurred.
C. After his/her review, the Assistant Dean for Undergraduate
and Credit Professional Programs shall inform the student
by letter of his or her decision and the sanction, if
any, to be imposed. (If the student is not registered
in the School of Continuing Studies, the sanction will
be determined by the school in which the student is registered;
see VI. below.)
III. Sanctions
A. Sanctions which may be imposed by the Assistant Dean
for Undergraduate and Credit Professional Programs include,
but are not limited to: a letter of warning; a defined
period of probation with the attachment of conditions;
disqualification for academic honors; a defined period
of suspension, with or without the attachment of conditions;
permanent exclusion from the University; notation on
the official record; revocation of an awarded degree;
or any combination of the previously listed sanctions.
In all cases of permanent exclusion from the University,
a notation shall be entered on the student’s official
transcript.
B. Any grade entered for a student in a course in which
an allegation of academic dishonesty is pending against
him/her, whether for the course as a whole or for a piece
of work submitted in the course, is subject to modification
after all proceedings and appeals are concluded. Should
the student be found to have violated academic integrity,
the course instructor is empowered, in his/her sole discretion,
to determine the effect this violation will have on the
student's grade in the course. Possible actions range
from disregarding the incident in calculating the grade
to failing the student in the course.
IV. Appeals to the Academic Integrity Appeals
Committee
A. The Assistant Dean’s decision and/or sanction
may be appealed to the Academic Integrity Appeals Committee
by filing a written notice of appeal within ten working
days of the date of the letter of notification. The student’s
written notice of appeal must state what is being appealed--whether
the finding of academic dishonesty, the sanction imposed,
or both--and must describe in detail the grounds for the
appeal. The student’s written notice of appeal should
also state whether the student desires to present the appeal
in person to the Academic Integrity Appeals Committee.
B. If the student so requests, he or she will be granted
an opportunity to appear to present his or her case to
the Academic Integrity Appeals Committee and to hear
and respond to any testimony provided by the Assistant
Dean for Undergraduate and Credit Professional Programs
or witnesses appearing before the Academic Integrity
Appeals Committee. Likewise, the Assistant Dean for Undergraduate
and Credit Professional Programs may be present to hear
and respond to testimony of the accused student or any
witnesses appearing before the Academic Integrity Appeals
Committee. If the student wishes to present witnesses
before the Academic Integrity Appeals Committee s/he
must inform the Academic Integrity Appeals Committee
at least seven working days before the appeal is to be
heard of the names of the proposed witnesses and of the
nature of the evidence they are prepared to present.
However, the Academic Integrity Appeals Committee has
sole discretion to determine what witnesses other than
the accused student and the Assistant Dean for Undergraduate
and Credit Professional Programs it will hear, if any.
The Academic Integrity Appeals Committee shall review
the appeal as soon as practical after it has been filed.
C. Following its review, the Academic Integrity Appeals
Committee may sustain or reverse the finding of academic
dishonesty, if that portion of the Assistant Dean for
Undergraduate and Credit Professional Programs’ decision
was appealed, and may, if a finding of academic dishonesty
stands, sustain or modify (but not increase) the sanction,
if that portion of the decision was appealed. The Academic
Integrity Appeals Committee shall inform the student
by letter of its decision.
V. Appeal to the Provost
The student may appeal the Academic Integrity Appeals Committee’s
decision within ten working days to the Provost of the
University. Such appeals must be in writing and include
a detailed statement setting forth the grounds for the
appeal. Appeals to the Provost will be limited to alleged
errors in procedures, interpretation of regulations, or
alleged manifest discrepancies between the evidence and
a school finding and/or sanction. The Provost will receive
appeals only after a sanction has been specified for the
alleged violation (see III. above); an appeal to the Provost
may concern the finding and/or the proposed sanction.
VI. Cross-School Cases
A. In instances where a student registered in another school
is alleged to have committed an act of academic dishonesty
in a School of Continuing Studies course, the authority
of the School of Continuing Studies will extend only
to determining whether or not the alleged action constitutes
academic dishonesty and, if so, to the imposition of
any grade penalty by the instructor in the course (see
IIIB.). If the finding is affirmative and all appeals
have been exhausted or the time for appeals has expired
in the School of Continuing Studies, the case will be
formally referred to the appropriate authority of the
school in which the student is registered for whatever
further sanction that school deems appropriate.
B. In instances where a student registered in the School
of Continuing Studies has been found to have committed
an act of academic dishonesty in a course offered by another
school, the Assistant Dean for Undergraduate and Credit
Professional Programs will notify the student in writing
of the formal referral of the matter to School of Continuing
Studies for determination of a sanction, if any. Such notification
will inform the student that he/she should schedule an
appointment with the Assistant Dean for Undergraduate and
Credit Professional Programs, to take place within seven
working days, to present any evidence of mitigating circumstances,
but not on the underlying question of guilt or innocence.
If the student does not schedule an appointment within
the allotted time, or within such extension of time as
the Assistant Dean for Undergraduate and Credit Professional
Programs may grant in his/her sole discretion, the Assistant
Dean for Undergraduate and Credit Professional Programs
will make a decision regarding any sanction based on the
available information.
C. The Assistant Dean for Undergraduate and Credit Professional
Programs will inform the student in writing of any sanction
imposed and of the student’s right to appeal that
sanction (but not issues of guilt or innocence) to the
Academic Integrity Appeals Committee.
VII. General Considerations
A. A student charged with academic dishonesty may not
change his or her registration in the course(s) in which
a charge is pending or in which a finding of academic dishonesty
has been made. Nor may such students receive a University
degree while a charge of academic dishonesty is pending
or a suspension imposed pursuant to a finding of academic
dishonesty is in effect.
B. At any stage of the proceedings described above, the
student may be accompanied by a fellow student, a faculty
member, or another individual of the student’s
choosing, but not by an attorney. This person may not,
however, take part in the proceedings; the student must
speak on his or her own behalf.
C. Sanctions specified by the Assistant Dean for Undergraduate
and Credit Professional Programs, as modified by the
School of Continuing Studies Academic Integrity Appeals
Committee or the Provost (if an appeal has been filed),
shall take effect at the expiration of the period for
appeal of a decision if an appeal has not been filed,
and after a decision has been reached by the School of
Continuing Studies Academic Integrity Appeals Committee
or the Provost if an appeal has been filed. If the appeal
is not granted, the sanction will be applied retroactively
to the date specified by the Assistant Dean for Undergraduate
and Credit Professional Programs, and, if necessary,
current registrations may be canceled.
D. All materials relating to an allegation of academic
dishonesty will be kept in the School of Continuing Studies
Office of Registration and Records for up to ten years
after the incident.
E. All references to the Assistant Dean for Undergraduate
and Credit Professional Programs in these procedures include
the Assistant Dean’s designee, whom the Assistant
Dean for Undergraduate and Credit Professional Programs
may appoint at his or her discretion
F. If circumstances (e.g., departure of the faculty member)
prevent the instructor of the course in which the violation
is alleged to have occurred from participating at any stage
of these procedures, the Assistant Dean for Undergraduate
and Credit Professional Programs may act on the instructor’s
behalf.
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