Academic Dishonesty Policy
Academic dishonesty includes, but is not limited to, activities such as cheating
and plagiarism (http://aa.colstate.edu/advising/a.asp#AcademicDishonestyAcademicMisconduct). It is a basis for disciplinary action. Any work turned in for individual
credit must be entirely the work of the student submitting the work. All work must
be your own. [For group projects, the work must be done only by members of the group.]
You may share ideas but submitting identical assignments (for example) will be considered
cheating. You may discuss the material in the course and help one another with debugging;
however, any work you hand in for a grade must be your own. A simple way to avoid
inadvertent plagiarism is to talk about the assignments, but don't read each other's
work or write solutions together unless otherwise directed by your instructor. For
your own protection, keep scratch paper and old versions of assignments to establish
ownership, until after the assignment has been graded and returned to you. If you
have any questions about this, please see your instructor immediately. For assignments,
access to notes, the course textbooks, books and other publications is allowed.
All work that is not your own, MUST be properly cited. This includes any material
found on the Internet. Stealing or giving or receiving any code, diagrams, drawings,
text or designs from another person (CSU or non-CSU, including the Internet) is
not allowed. Having access to another person's work on the computer system or giving
access to your work to another person is not allowed. It is your responsibility
to prevent others from having unauthorized access to your work.
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