MIDDLE SCHOOL HONOR CODE Rationale Nido de Aguilas combines high academic standards with a concern for basic truths and principles. Our Middle School values honor, respect and integrity. We aim to nurture conscientious, ethical, empathetic students who make decisions for their own good and the good of the community. The honor code is designed to educate our students about these principles AND to hold our students accountable to them. Definition of Academic Dishonesty Students must present only their own work for assessment and grading. Therefore, academic dishonesty is defined as completing and/or submitting work that is not entirely a student’s own, or assisting another student in submitting dishonest work. Examples of Breaking of the Honor Code The following list provides common examples of unacceptable practice. The list is not exhaustive and each case will be judged upon its own merits by the classroom teacher and, if need be, by the administration. ● Asking for an answer or giving someone an answer inappropriately on an assessment ● Copying from another source (student or book) i.e. plagiarism ● Allowing another student to copy from your work ● Sharing test answers or questions with those who have not taken it yet ● Bringing in unauthorized information on your hands, clothes, or paper to use on tests ● Putting your name on someone else's paper for a grade ● Forging a parent’s signature to validate work ● Unauthorized collaboration on an assignment ● Data falsification (e.g. fabricated, altered or copied data on a lab report) Plagiarism Plagiarism is defined as the presentation of another’s words or ideas as one’s own and without proper citation. When students plagiarize, they usually do so in one of the following ways: ● Using the words or original ideas of another without proper citation ● Failing to use quotation marks when citing a source ● Paraphrasing another’s work without citing the original source Examples of common sources of plagiarized materials include work by other students, journal articles, books and the Internet. It should be noted that even non-deliberate failure to acknowledge a source might constitute plagiarism. Forgetting a footnote or reference is not an acceptable excuse.
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