University of Notre Dame
Academic Code of Honor Online Orientation
OVERVIEW
In the summer of 2006, the University of Notre Dame
initiated a program designed to insure that our incoming undergraduate
students have thought carefully both about general issues relating to
academic integrity and about the specific ways in which we promote
academic integrity via our honor code at Notre Dame.
Under this program, each new undergraduate had to
pass an online orientation prior to finalizing their class registration
during the summer. Students were presented with eight fictional
cases – two involving collaborative work, one concerning the
falsification of data, two regarding test-taking, and three related to
plagiarism – and asked whether or not any violation of the Academic
Code of Honor had occurred. Students were asked to choose among
four responses indicating whether or not a violation had occurred and
why (or why not). Only one of the four responses was
correct. To pass the orientation, students needed to get at least
six of the eight correct responses. Those who failed on their
first attempt could try again the next day, though they typically would
receive different hypothetical cases to consider. (The eight
cases each student received were chosen randomly from among the 33
available.)
The impetus for this program came from our
recognition that too many of our students were arriving on campus
having given little or no thought either to the standards of honesty
they should be upholding or to the way those standards are manifested
in our honor code. For years, new students were sent a copy of
the hefty
Handbook to the Academic
Code of Honor, told to read it, and instructed to send back a
signed form indicating their familiarity with the honor code and their
intention to abide by it. Reports from students over the years
convinced us (as common sense should have informed us) that few if any
students were actually reading the Handbook. Students were
dutifully signing the form and sending it in, but for most it
represented very little investment of time or thought.
Last year, a new pamphlet,
The Student
Guide to the Academic Code of Honor, which presents the
information students most need to know concerning our honor code, was
distributed to all students. Our incoming students also received
a copy of the Student Guide this summer and were instructed to attempt
the orientation only after they had read the Student Guide. The
orientation was designed so that students who had not looked at the
Student Guide were unlikely to succeed. Hence, our hope is that
the online orientation will ensure that our new students have both
thought about issues related to academic integrity and familiarized
themselves with the most significant particulars of our honor
code.
The online orientation was the fruit of nearly a
year’s worth of work by the students and faculty on the University Code
of Honor Committee in 2005-2006. Because we plan to continue
using it in future years, we do not intend to make the entire document
broadly available, either in hard copies or online. However, so
that those with an interest in our initiative can see more clearly the
type of “test” we are giving our incoming students, we have decided to
make a representative case available. What follows, then, is one
case taken from the orientation. It is presented precisely as it
was given to the students, along with explanations (available to the
students online when they complete the orientation) for why answers
were correct or incorrect.
Should you have any questions about or comments on
Notre Dame’s online orientation, please contact:
Prof. Thomas P. Flint
Faculty Honor Code Officer
417 Malloy Hall
University of Notre Dame
Notre Dame, IN 46556
tflint@nd.edu
Citation: administrator. (2006, October 04). Overview. Retrieved November 23, 2009, from Notre Dame OpenCourseWare Web site: http://ocw.nd.edu/university-resources/university-honor-code-tutorial/overview.
University of Notre Dame,
University of Notre Dame.
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