Common use of Honor Code Clause in Contracts

Honor Code. “As a student of Community School of Naples, I pledge to conduct myself in an honorable fashion. I will not lie, cheat, steal nor tolerate anyone who does. I will not impinge on the rights of others.” Abiding by the values of the Honor Code, the students of Community School of Naples agree that it is their responsibility to maintain and promote respect for themselves, their peers, the faculty, administration and staff. We understand that the success of the Honor Code depends on the integrity of each student to abide by these principles and to educate each other. The following partial list of infractions serves to familiarize students, parents and faculty with some behaviors that violate CSN Honor Code. Other behaviors not explicitly listed here are subject to interpretation by the Citizenship Committee. Lying is the deliberate misrepresentation of one or more facts. Lying is an attempt to convey a false impression or is any concealment of facts with the intent to mislead. • Lying verbally to a faculty member, administrator, school employee or an adult in authority • Lying in writing (Example: by forging notes, permission slips/attendance slips, etc.) Cheating is the violation of the established rules affecting the content of any work, including copying from a fellow student, plagiarism, unauthorized acquisition of advance knowledge of the contents of a test or assignment or any other violation of the rules and conditions of any academic or other school project. • Using or attempting to use unauthorized assistance, material, or study aids on examinations or other academic work (Example: using a cheat sheet, storing information in a calculator without the permission of the teacher currently teaching that course, etc.) • Fabrication: submitting contrived or altered information in any academic exercise. (Example: making up data without participating in an experiment, citing nonexistent articles, contriving sources, etc.) • Facilitating academic dishonesty: knowingly helping or attempting to help another violate any provision of the Honor Code. (Example: working together on a take home examination, etc.) • Class-to-Class: divulging or receiving any test, quiz, or examination information to or from another student before either student has completed the graded work. • Plagiarism: paraphrasing or using the ideas, data, or language of another without specific or proper acknowledgment – citation or other explicit permission. (Example: copying another person’s paper, article, or computer work and submitting it for an assignment, paraphrasing someone else’s ideas without attribution, failing to use quotation marks where appropriate, etc.) As a learning community, we recognize that working together enhances our individual education. For this reason CSN encourages cooperative learning. However, collaboration is at the discretion of the teacher and merits the teachers’ verbal or written permission in advance.

Appears in 1 contract

Sources: Upper School Student Handbook

Honor Code. “As a student of The Community School of Naples, I pledge to conduct myself in an honorable fashion. I will not lie, cheat, steal nor tolerate anyone who does. I will not impinge on the rights of others.” Abiding by the values of the Honor Code, the students of the Community School of Naples agree that it is their responsibility to maintain and promote respect for themselves, their peers, the faculty, administration and staff. We understand that the success of the Honor Code depends on the integrity of each student to abide by these principles and to educate each other. The following partial list of infractions serves to familiarize students, parents and faculty with some behaviors that violate the CSN Honor Code. Other behaviors not explicitly listed here are subject to interpretation by the Citizenship Committee. Lying is the deliberate misrepresentation of one or more facts. Lying is an attempt to convey a false impression or is any concealment of facts with the intent to mislead. • Lying verbally to a faculty member, administrator, school employee or an adult in authority • Lying in writing (Example: by forging notes, permission slips/attendance slips, etc.) Cheating is the violation of the established rules affecting the content of any work, including copying from a fellow student, plagiarism, unauthorized acquisition of advance knowledge of the contents of a test or assignment or any other violation of the rules and conditions of any academic or other school project. • Using or attempting to use unauthorized assistance, material, or study aids on examinations or other academic work (Example: using a cheat sheet, storing information in a calculator without the permission of the teacher currently teaching that course, etc.) • Fabrication: submitting contrived or altered information in any academic exercise. (Example: making up data without participating in an experiment, citing nonexistent articles, contriving sources, etc.) • Facilitating academic dishonesty: knowingly helping or attempting to help another violate any provision of the Honor Code. (Example: working together on a take home examination, etc.) • Class-to-Class: divulging or receiving any test, quiz, or examination information to or from another student before either student has completed the graded work. • Plagiarism: paraphrasing or using the ideas, data, or language of another without specific or proper acknowledgment – citation or other explicit permission. (Example: copying another person’s paper, article, or computer work and submitting it for an assignment, paraphrasing someone else’s ideas without attribution, failing to use quotation marks where appropriate, etc.) As a learning community, we recognize that working together enhances our individual education. For this reason CSN encourages cooperative learning. However, collaboration is at the discretion of the teacher and merits the teachers’ verbal or written permission in advance.

Appears in 1 contract

Sources: Upper School Student Handbook