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(1) This policy ensures the university takes a consistent approach to academic integrity across the (2) The academic integrity policy: (3) This policy applies to all staff and students of the (4) Staff and students at RMIT commit to conducting themselves in a manner that is consistent with the principles of academic integrity set out in this policy when undertaking teaching, learning, assessment, academic scholarship and research activities. (5) Academic integrity means that staff and students at RMIT act with the core values of honesty, trust, respect, fairness, and responsibility in education, learning, teaching, training and research, including by acknowledging the sources of ideas; both original and the work of others. (6) Through the academic integrity policy, RMIT will: (7) RMIT undertakes to detect and deter breaches of academic integrity through strategies including but not limited to: (8) Academic integrity breach data is: (9) Students share responsibility for maintaining academic integrity at RMIT; this is achieved through: (10) Staff engaged in learning and teaching, assessment, higher degree by research candidate supervision, and related activities, demonstrate a commitment to academic integrity through responsibilities including and not limited to: (11) Schools/industry clusters provide academic integrity breach notifications to the College Quality Enhancement Teams (or equivalent) for the purposes of facilitating continuous improvement. (12) Staff model their commitment to academic integrity principles through their own professional and scholarly work. (13) Colleges and portfolios support a culture of academic integrity by: (14) The Academic Registrar's Group is responsible for: (15) A breach of academic integrity involves acting or behaving in a dishonest, unethical, unfair or irresponsible way in teaching, learning or research activities. Breaches of academic integrity include, but are not limited to the following examples: (16) Allegations of academic integrity breaches will be responded to in a fair, consistent, transparent and timely manner in accordance with the Academic Integrity Procedure. (17) Prevention, detection, investigation and resolution of potential research integrity breaches are managed in accordance with the Research Policy, Research Integrity Breach Management Procedure, Student Conduct Policy and other RMIT policies as appropriate. (18) Breaches of this policy by students or staff members that adversely affect or undermine academic integrity will be managed via the: (19) This policy will be reviewed every three (3) years in accordance with RMIT’s Policy Governance Framework. (20) Refer to the following document which is established in accordance with this policy:Academic Integrity Policy
Section 1 - Purpose
Section 2 - Overview
Top of PageSection 3 - Scope
Section 4 - Policy
Commitment to Academic Integrity
Definition of Academic Integrity
Principles
Student Responsibilities
Staff Responsibilities
College and Portfolio Responsibilities
Academic Registrar's Group Responsibilities
Academic Integrity Breaches
Compliance
Review
Section 5 - Procedures and Resources
Section 6 - Definitions
Academic misconduct
Academic Registrar's Group
Student Conduct unit within the Integrity.
College Quality Enhancement Team (or Equivalent)
teams led by the Senior Manager Quality Enhancement within the colleges.
Collusion
is unauthorised collaboration. Occurs where more than one student contributes to an assessment task that is submitted as the work of an individual student where the collaboration is not permitted for the assessment task. Collusion may also occur in group work where unauthorised collaboration occurs between groups.
Contract cheating
is the use of outsourced material for the purpose of submission by a student for assessment. The person submitting the work is being dishonest by representing it as their own. This differs from traditional forms of plagiarism, which more commonly involves copying of existing submitted or published work. Contract cheating can take on many forms and is not limited to the purchasing of assessment material from online sources. Students may obtain assessments from peers or ‘tutors’ and the arrangement may not involve a financial exchange. Significantly, the submitted work is usually original in nature making it difficult to detect using text matching plagiarism software.
Copying
occurs when paragraphs, sentences, a single sentence or significant parts of a sentence, or the key points or structure of another person’s work have been used in an assessment without acknowledging the source.
Fabrication
occurs when a student claims to have carried out tests, experiments, research or observations that have not taken place.
Falsification
involves the misrepresentation of research data, source material or results, or the presentation of results that are not supported by the evidence.
Impersonation
involves the completion and submission of an assessment task by another person that dishonestly misrepresents themselves as the person to whom the assessment task was assigned. Impersonation can also take place in the context of invigilated assessment wherein a person completes the assessment on behalf of another whilst dishonestly misrepresenting their identity.
Plagiarism
the presentation of the work, idea or creation of another person as though it is one’s own. Plagiarism is a form of cheating and is a serious academic offence that may lead to expulsion from the University. Plagiarised material can be drawn from, and presented in, written, graphic or visual form, including electronic data, and oral presentations. Plagiarism occurs when the origin of the material used is not appropriately cited.