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Question.5038 - Week 6Academic Integrity—What Are the Rules?DiscussionRequired ResourcesRead/review the following resources for this activity:Textbook: Chapter 12LessonInitial Post InstructionsIntroductionCase 1: Claudine GayEarly in 2024, Claudine Gay, then president of Harvard University, was called out for numerous instances of plagiarism found in her doctoral dissertation and other published papers. The Harvard board, a school subcommittee, and an independent panel charged with investigating the plagiarism allegations against Gay found “a few instances of inadequate citation” but “no violation of Harvard’s standard for research misconduct. While some were critical of her, many academics came to her defense, as did members of the public. A writer in the online newspaper The Guardian went so far as to say, “While Gay more than anyone should have known better, it seems unfair that she should be the one to take the fall when her errors were missed by the institutions that published her" (Lawrence, 2024, para.6)Case 1 Questions:Has the reaction from Harvard and other academics tended to minimize the seriousness of plagiarism? If no one at Harvard, where she received her doctorate, found instances of plagiarism, should she not be held responsible? Does this mean if no one detects plagiarism, it’s okay?Keep in mind that this discussion is not about whether or not Dr. Gay should have resigned from the presidency of Harvard. The discussion is about public and academic reactions to plagiarism and the seriousness of plagiarism. Case 2: Professor Lang vs. Professor MarksIs the way that colleges design courses, especially undergraduate general education courses, encouraging cheating? According to Lang (2013), course design can encourage cheating. These include required courses that students just want to get out of the way so they can take the classes they really want to take. High-stakes assessments put intense pressure on each of those grade-earning opportunities and ratchet up the incentive to cheat on each one. Emphasizing grades—performance over learning in large or online classes can create an impersonal environment. Students who are driven by extrinsic motivation seek external rewards for their learning: grades, for example. Students driven by intrinsic motivation, by contrast, seek to understand the course material for its own sake. Students driven purely by extrinsic motivation are more likely to cheat. "If they don’t see how the course material is relevant to their lives—or if the instructor cannot help them see it—they never develop the intrinsic motivation that leads to deep learning and makes cheating less likely.” (Lang, 2013, para. 10)Or is it a question of character? According to Marks (2013), “Lang shies away from the question of character. Instead, his book is about helping ‘faculty members to respond more effectively to academic dishonesty by modifying the learning environments they [have] constructed" (para. 4). "If we think of our students as subjects in our laboratory, to be manipulated and nudged toward desirable behaviors, how can we develop in them the qualities of character they will need to govern themselves in environments we do not control?” (para. 6)Case 2 Questions:Who’s right, Professor Lang or Professor Marks?Should colleges make sure students don’t cheat, or should students make sure they don’t cheat? For your initial post, respond to Case 1 Questions and Case 2 Questions. As you compose your initial post, think about the issue of plagiarism. Why does it matter? To what extent, if at all, should plagiarism be overlooked? If courses seem irrelevant to you, might it be okay to cheat or plagiarize?Follow-up Post InstructionsRespond to one of your peers—try to find someone with whom you disagree. Analyze their post to determine their reasons, then evaluate their post according to the quality of their reasoning. Check your reasoning—and the reasoning of your peer—for cognitive bias or fallacies.Writing RequirementsMinimum of 2 posts (1 initial & 1 follow-up) Minimum of 2 sources cited (assigned readings/online lessons and an outside source) APA format for in-text citations and list of referencesGradingThis activity will be graded using the Discussion Grading Rubric. Review: Discussion GuidelinesOpen this document with ReadSpeaker docReaderReview the specific grading rubric by clicking on the three dots in the upper right corner. Course OutcomesCO 4: Evaluate arguments by applying standard tests. CO 5: Evaluate the role of cognitive bias and fallacies of relevance in critical reasoning and decision-making. CO 6: Apply principles of critical reasoning to political, educational, economic, and/or social issues

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Hello xxxxx and xxxxxxxxx Case xxxxxxxx GayThe xxxxxx and xxxxxxxx response xx Claudine xxx s xxxxxxxxxx highlights x concerning xxxxx toward xxxxxxxxxx the xxxxxxxxxxx of xxxxxxxx dishonesty xxxxx Harvard x review xxxxxxxxx that xxx citation xxxxxxxx didn x rise xx the xxxxx of xxxxxxxx misconduct xxxx response xxxxx sending xxx message xxxx plagiarism xx only xxxxx if xxxxxx or xxxxxxxxxxx Academic xxxxxxxxx is xxx about xxx likelihood xx being xxxxxxxx it xx about xxxxxxxxxx trust xx scholarship xx institutions xxxxxxxx citation xxxxxx especially xx the xxxxxxx levels xx academia xxxx undermine xxx ethical xxxxxxxxx expected xx students xxx scholars xxxxx Lawrence xxx as x leading xxxxxxxx and xxxxxxxxxx president xxxxxx be xxxx to xxx highest xxxxxxxx not xxxxxxx due xx institutional xxxxxxxxx Case xxxx vs xxxxxxxxx Lang xxx Marks xxxx valid xxxxxx but xxxxx focus xx character xx ultimately xxxx compelling xxxxx Lang xxxxxxx critiques xxxxxx design xxxx fosters xxxxxxxxx motivation xxx high-stakes xxxxxxxx he xxxxxxxxx the xxxxx responsibility xx the xxxxxxx Academic xxxxxxxxx should xxx depend xxxxxx on xxxxxx structure xxxxxxxx must xx taught xx value xxxxxxxx and xxxxxxx ethical xxxxxxxxx As xxxxx argues xx we xxxx modify xxx environment xxxxxxx cultivating xxxxxxxxx we xxxx raising xxxxxxxx who xxxxxx ethically xxxx when xxxxxxxxx Colleges xxxxxx design xxxxxxxxxx engaging xxxxxxx but xxxxxxxx must xxxx be xxxxxxxxxxx for xxxxx choices xx both xxxxx the xxxxxxxxxx to xxxxxx dishonesty xxxxxxx through xxxxxxxxxxxxx failure xx uninspiring xxxxxxxxxx erodes xxxxx in xxxxxxxxx Plagiarism xxx cheating xxxxxx because xxxx violate xxx only xxxxxxxx standards xxx personal xxxxxxxxx Regardless xx the xxxxxxx it xx never xxxx to xxxxx ReferencesLang x M xxxxxx How xxxxxxx classes xxxxxxxxx cheating xxxxxx Globe xxxxx www xxxxxxxxxxx com xxxxx how-college-classes-encourage-cheating x x xxxxxxxxx yO xxx story xxxx Lawrence x January xxxxxxx s xxxxxxxx Gay xxx ousted xxx plagiarism xxx serious xxx it xxxxxx The xxxxxxxx https xxx theguardian xxx education xxx harvard-claudine-gay-plagiarismMarks x October xx fighting xxxxxxxx character xxxxxx Inside xxxxxx Ed xxxxx www xxxxxxxxxxxxxx com xxxxx fight-against-cheating-character-counts-essay xxxxx

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