American University,
Washington, D.C.
Academic integrity is fundamental to the pursuit
of academic excellence. The following teaching practices, drawn from the American
University faculty and the professional literature, can help to promote
integrity, cultivate excellence, and prevent dishonesty.
Setting the Tone:
- Include a strong
statement about the Academic Integrity Code in the course syllabus.
- Discuss the relevance
and importance of integrity to your work; share a personal experience or
anecdote about intellectual honesty/property.
- Set high standards; articulate
clear expectations; give meaningful assignments; make fair assessments.
- Foster and model the
Center for Academic Integrity’s (www.academicintegrity.org) Five Fundamental Values:
- Respect,
- Trust,
- Responsibility,
- Honesty,
- Fairness.
- Get to know students
and their work, personally.
- Include a syllabus
statement on the meaning of grades and standards applied to each.
- Define types of
academic dishonesty and challenge students to think about how they would handle
situations that might lead to or constitute an integrity violation.
- Model the scholastic
enterprise: asserting an original voice while respectfully dialoguing with
others.
Information Skills:
Paper Assignments:
- Give specific paper
topics.
- Request specific
components in the paper (e.g., minimum articles, books; an interview).
- Require several
stages in the paper writing process:
- Thesis topic
discussion,
- Annotated bibliography,
- Outline,
- Drafts,
- Oral presentation,
- Etc.
- Review and give
feedback on the various stages of the paper assignment.
- Involve the class in
peer review of each other’s work, including a “signoff” by readers.
- Conclude major paper
assignments with a “metalearning” essay (reflecting on what the student learned
in the writing process) and/or a brief oral presentation on the topic.
Other Practices:
- Give frequent,
smaller assignments rather than “all or nothing,” high stakes assignments.
- Avoid unnecessarily
scheduling deadlines at major crunch times (e.g., last week of term).
- Integrate ethical
dilemmas into the curriculum, as they relate to the discipline.
- Emphasize critical
thinking vs. rote memorization.
- Share previous tests
to demonstrate exam styles/expectations and types of answers; engage class in
debate of possible answers to possible questions.
- Vary
assignments/exams from semester to semester.
- Require groups to
keep work-logs and to assess each other, including self-evaluations.
- Define clearly the
course standards for collaboration (group work, editing, tutoring, etc.).
Article Link (used with permission):
http://www.american.edu/academics/integrity/acinteg.teaching%20practices.pdf
Prepared by the Office
of the Provost, American University; February 2002
Please feel free to contact John Crane (jcrane@uwf.edu, 473-7239).
Have a great day!
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