hi thank you for all your help. Could you please answer these questions for me briefly please thanks. 1.You are working
Posted: Mon May 23, 2022 12:59 pm
hi thank you for all your help. Could you please answer these
questions for me briefly please thanks.
1.You are working at a computer in the school library. You
finish your work, save it to the desktop, submit it to Brightspace,
and leave. Another student in your class comes along, finds your
file and turns it in as her own. Are you responsible for academic
dishonesty?
2. You ask your instructor whether she would be willing to
read a draft of an essay that is due in a week. Your essay contains
paraphrases of secondary sources that you used in your essay but
you have not included any in-text citations or written the
references list yet. You figure this is okay, since this is a draft
of the essay and not the final copy you plan to turn in for a
grade. Is this considered academic dishonesty?
3.You have to write a literature review for your Evidence-Based
Nursing Practice course that includes at least 10 relevant articles
from medical journals. You locate all 10 sources, but it’s taking a
really long time to read and understand all of them, and the review
is due in a week. You decide to thoroughly read half the articles,
then just skim the abstract and citations for the other half. Some
of the details you write about the articles are vague or incorrect,
but your professor doesn’t notice, and you earn a B+ on the
assignment. Have you acted with academic integrity in this
situation?
4.You ask a friend, who is a good writer, to look over your
paper. She is happy to help and finds many awkward phrases and
ambiguous assertions, which she re-writes for you. She even
develops a few new arguments to help support your thesis. You are
happy because she was able to express clearly and persuasively what
you had been trying to say all along. Is this academic
dishonesty?
5.You notice that a paper assignment in your class is just like
one you wrote for another class. You change the cover sheet and a
few sentences in the introduction and turn it in. This is okay
because it is your own work, right?
6.You are working on your first Position Post for this course.
The instructions specific that you should not do any research, so
you ask your supervisor at the hospital for the information you
need and include what she said. You are pretty sure you only have
to cite written sources, so you do not mention in the paper where
your information came from. Is this academic dishonesty?
questions for me briefly please thanks.
1.You are working at a computer in the school library. You
finish your work, save it to the desktop, submit it to Brightspace,
and leave. Another student in your class comes along, finds your
file and turns it in as her own. Are you responsible for academic
dishonesty?
2. You ask your instructor whether she would be willing to
read a draft of an essay that is due in a week. Your essay contains
paraphrases of secondary sources that you used in your essay but
you have not included any in-text citations or written the
references list yet. You figure this is okay, since this is a draft
of the essay and not the final copy you plan to turn in for a
grade. Is this considered academic dishonesty?
3.You have to write a literature review for your Evidence-Based
Nursing Practice course that includes at least 10 relevant articles
from medical journals. You locate all 10 sources, but it’s taking a
really long time to read and understand all of them, and the review
is due in a week. You decide to thoroughly read half the articles,
then just skim the abstract and citations for the other half. Some
of the details you write about the articles are vague or incorrect,
but your professor doesn’t notice, and you earn a B+ on the
assignment. Have you acted with academic integrity in this
situation?
4.You ask a friend, who is a good writer, to look over your
paper. She is happy to help and finds many awkward phrases and
ambiguous assertions, which she re-writes for you. She even
develops a few new arguments to help support your thesis. You are
happy because she was able to express clearly and persuasively what
you had been trying to say all along. Is this academic
dishonesty?
5.You notice that a paper assignment in your class is just like
one you wrote for another class. You change the cover sheet and a
few sentences in the introduction and turn it in. This is okay
because it is your own work, right?
6.You are working on your first Position Post for this course.
The instructions specific that you should not do any research, so
you ask your supervisor at the hospital for the information you
need and include what she said. You are pretty sure you only have
to cite written sources, so you do not mention in the paper where
your information came from. Is this academic dishonesty?