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Looking to raise the profile of academic integrity
issues on campus, a committee of faculty members, students, and
administrators is trying to simplify and unify the university honor
code and judicial processes.
Academic Integrity Council chair Judith Ruderman, vice provost
for academic affairs, told a joint meeting of the Arts and Sciences
Council and the Engineering Faculty Council in April that there
is growing concern because national surveys show unacceptably high
rates of cheating, plagiarism, and other misconduct. While Duke
has not faced an academic scandal, Ruderman said the time is right
to revise the honor code and campus judicial practices, to raise
awareness among both faculty members and students, and to create
a stronger campus climate for academic honesty.
The committee's recommendations include establishing a new "Community
Standard," which would take the place of the university's three
different honor-code documents; eliminating the requirement that
all exams be proctored; making formal the common practice of faculty
members informally handling certain allegations of misconduct; and
allowing a wider range of sanctions for academic misconduct.
As part of the new honor code, the committee also proposes adding
an obligation for students to report--anonymously--any incidents
of misconduct they observe. Students now have no such obligation
to report.
"We believe these recommendations will reduce cheating,"
Ruderman said. "It will do this by sharing responsibility and
creating trust between faculty and students, by building a climate
conducive to other changes, by taking a holistic approach to student
behavior, and by not separating between what happens in the classroom
from what happens outside of it."
The proposed new Community Standard reads:
"Duke University is a community of scholars and learners,
committed to the principles of honesty, trustworthiness, fairness,
and respect for others. Students share with faculty and staff the
responsibility for promoting a climate of integrity. As citizens
of this community, students are expected to adhere to these fundamental
values at all times, in both their academic and non-academic endeavors.
"By signing this pledge, I affirm my commitment to uphold
the values of the Duke University community:
"I will not lie, cheat, or steal in my academic endeavors,
nor will I accept the actions of those who do.
"I will conduct myself responsibly and honorably in all my
activities as a Duke student."
The Academic Integrity Committee wants the new single standard
to become a prominent part of the campus, Ruderman said. It can
be on tests, posted in classrooms, and discussed in residence halls.
The committee believes a single standard is easier to understand
and to incorporate into campus life.
Adding an obligation for students to report misconduct is a controversial
step, Ruderman said, but to date students have supported it. "Students
understand that it's not good enough just to say there's cheating
in the classroom."
But there is an additional question of whether anonymous reports
should be allowed. Some members of the Arts and Sciences Council
raised concern about fairness, saying anonymous reporting could
lead to unsubstantiated and undefendable charges.
The background for the discussion is an unease on campuses nationally
with misconduct scandals that have arisen at the University of Virginia
and elsewhere. At Duke, faculty and students studying the issue
believe Duke is ahead of the national trends in addressing the issue,
but a Duke-specific survey showed worrisome levels of misconduct.
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