The Harvard Crimson - Volume CL, No. 14: Commencement 2023

Page 15

NEWS

THE HARVARD CRIMSON

COMMENCEMENT 2023

29

HONOR COUNCIL

College Sees Drop in Honor Council Cases HONOR REPORT. Updated statistics from the College’s Honor Council showed a sharp decrease in the number of academic dishonesty cases referred to the body for the 2021-22 school year. Last year saw a six-year high in Honor Code violations. BY J. SELLERS HILL AND NIA L. ORAKWUE CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS

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he Harvard College Honor Council reviewed 100 academic dishonesty cases in the 2021-22 school year, 12 of which resulted in withdrawals, according to a report released this semester. The number reflects a marked drop from the 2020-21 academic year, during which the Council heard 138 cases and forced 27 students to withdraw, the highest number of cases and withdrawals since the Honor Council came into effect in 2015. Students who are forced to withdraw are typically required to work in a full-time, paid, non-academic job for more than six months before petitioning to return to the College. This withdrawal normally lasts for one to two academic years. The Honor Council is chaired by Dean of the College Dean Rakesh Khurana and consists of 24 voting members, including undergraduate students, teaching fellows, faculty members, and administrators. The body is responsible for adjudicating cases of suspected academic dishonesty across the Col-

lege. Of the 100 cases, 42 concerned instances of plagiarism, 35 were exam cheating, and 15 were inappropriate collaboration. Three cases involved “lying to a University officer,” and one case was described as “misuse of sources.” In addition to the 12 forced withdrawals, 34 students were placed on probation, a notice that further academic misconduct will lead to more serious repercussions. Twenty students were admonished, a result similar to probation but that does not change a student’s “in good standing” status. Four students received local sanctions, where the course instructor determines the student’s punishment, which can range from a grade penalty to mandatory tutoring. In 30 cases, it was found that either no violation occurred or the allegation could not be substantiated. For the sixth consecutive year, the majority of cases — 63 percent — involved freshmen, who “continue to be significantly overrepresented” in hearings, according to the report. Previous Honor Council reports have identified this pattern and cited it as a reason the body commits additional resources toward outreach and trainings for freshmen. “Early in their academic careers, students are more likely to be in large courses, trying out difficult or new material while at the same time they are adjusting to college and Yard and House life,” the Honor Council’s 2019-20 report read. Of the remaining cases in the

2021-22 year, 19 percent involved sophomores, 11 percent juniors, and 6 percent seniors. The majority of cases were referred to the Council by courses in the Sciences Division and School of Engineering and Applied Sciences. The report does not speculate on potential reasons for the overrepresentation of freshmen and students enrolled in STEM classes. Harvard College spokesperson Jonathan Palumbo declined to comment on the report beyond reiterating the College’s commitment to transparency. The 2019-20 report wrote that the overrepresentation of STEM cases “is not an exception from other universities,” noting a higher prevalence of graded assignments and the use of software to detect plagiarism in computer programs. “Both the cause and the effect of this disparity should continue to be the focus of discussion among the faculty, students, and community at large,” the report continued.

LEAH J. TEICHHOLTZ—CONTRIBUTING DESIGNER

sellers.hill@thecrimson.com nia.orakwue@thecrimson.com

THC Read more at THECRIMSON.COM

LEAH J. TEICHHOLTZ—CONTRIBUTING DESIGNER


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Articles inside

Students Voice Support for Mike Grant

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page 29

84% of Admits Accept Spots in Harvard College Class of 2027

1min
page 28

Majority of Faculty Identify as Liberal

5min
page 28

Harvard Awards Over $200,000 in Grants to Allston Nonprofits

2min
page 27

Madras Dosa Co. Brings a Dose of Dosa to Harvard Square

2min
page 27

Kenzie Bok ’11 Talks Path from Teacher to City Councilor

3min
page 27

Cava Brings Mediterranean to the Square

1min
page 27

Grad Student Plans to Sue MBTA

2min
pages 26-27

CFO Search Has Identified ‘Very Good Candidates,’ Pritzker Says

1min
pages 24-25

HUCTW Reaches Tentative Agreement

3min
page 24

Chief Clay Backs Students After Swatting

4min
page 23

Public Service Is Its Own Reward

4min
pages 18-19, 21-22

On SelfCensorship

2min
page 18

Indifference Is the Enemy of Democracy

3min
page 18

A Post-Covid Campus by Students, for Students

7min
page 17

Celebrating the Stories

3min
page 17

Khurana Defends Commencement Fees

3min
pages 16-17

College Sees Drop in Honor Council Cases

2min
page 15

Grad Students Union Enters Arbitration Over Exclusion

2min
pages 6-15

Harvard and Endeavor Launch Leadership Training Platform

4min
page 6

1,600 Sign Petition to Raise Student Wages

1min
page 6

in 2021, Tax Filings Show

1min
page 5

President Bacow Earned

1min
page 5

Letter Calls for Comaroff’s AAAS Removal

1min
page 5

Eight Harvard Affiliates Banned From Entering Russian Territory

2min
page 4

Sanctions Lifted on Prof. Martin Nowak

3min
page 4

THE HARVARD CRIMSON

1min
pages 3-4

Table of Contents

3min
pages 2-3
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