What is Plagiarism? Plagiarism is submitting all or parts of another’s work as ones own in an academic exercise, such as an examination, computer program, or written assignment.
Penalties for academic dishonesty: A disciplinary notation for academic dishonesty will be entered on the students academic record by the University Registrar. First incident the lead faculty will determine the penalty for the first incident, with the penalty ranging from a score of zero on the particular item being submitted to a failing grade in class depending on the severity of the incident. Second Incident: Any subsequent violation of Academic Integrity Policy in any other class will result in a failing grade in the class as well as disciplinary dismissal from the University.
How to void Academic Dishonesty: First find out what Academic Dishonesty/Plagiarism is, then you will be able to take the right precautions to avoid it.
The tools we have to help us avoid plagiarism is the Turnitin.com this is used by Franklin
University to assist students in detecting plagiarism. Also we have the Franklin style Manual that will help with proper citation, and quotation. There is also the Franklin University Library, And the SLC center.
Plagiarism is literary burglary. At its worst it involves an outright intent to deceive, to pass off another's work as one's own. Plagiarism is also like Identity theft! When someone obtains personal information from a person or company such as credit card numbers, bank account numbers, insurance information, and social security numbers to purchase goods or services fraudulently. Plagiarism and Identity theft is an act of stealing something that does not belong to one person. Both of these crimes are on the rise in the United States, and in different