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Integrity is a crucial part of your character and is essential for a successful career. We expect you to demonstrate integrity in this class and elsewhere.

The Paul G Allen School has an Academic Misconduct policy, and the University of Washington an Academic Misconduct and Community Standards and Student Conduct Page policy. Please acquaint yourself with those pages, and in particular how academic misconduct will be reported to the University. Knowingly violating any of these principles of academic conduct, privacy or copyright may result in University disciplinary action under the Student Code of Conduct.

Your academic conduct in this course is evaluated in at least the four areas described in detail below.

Honesty and Respect in Communications

Individuals are expected to be honest and forthcoming in communications with TAs and the instructor.

In addition, individuals are expected to show respect for the intellectual contributions of others through citation. The essence of academic life revolves around respect not only for the ideas of others, but also their rights to those ideas. It is therefore essential that we take the utmost care that the ideas (and the expressions of those ideas) of others always be handled appropriately, and, where necessary, cited. This is an issue of Citational Justice, and a core value of this course.

When ideas or materials of others are used (particularly in your creative projects), they must be cited. The citation format is not that important - as long as the source material can be located and the citation verified, it’s OK. In any situation, if you have a question, please feel free to ask. Here are some examples of how you might use (and cite) different types of content:

Some examples of appropriate use:

Students with questions about any specific situation should ask the instructor for clarification.

Collaboration Policies

In this class, are encouraged to discuss class material, including assignments, lecture material and readings with your classmates. Even better if this takes place on Ed where other students can benefit and we can guide you as to what is supportive and what crosses the line to too much sharing.

Some assignments are individual. Even when as assignment is individual, you may discuss homework assignments with other students (i.e. provide advice, brainstorm) as long your writing and/or implementation is entirely your own, and you document what you do. You may also look at other sources online to learn how to achieve new things, but we expect you to document this, and it may impact the credit you get for your work. You should never copy (plagiarize) from another person in this school (past or present) or from material that you find online directly and submit it as your own work.

To facilitate this, and to be very clear

Privacy and Fair Use

To support an academic environment of rigorous discussion and open expression of personal thoughts and feelings, we, as members of the academic community, must be committed to the inviolate right of privacy of our student and instructor colleagues. As a result, we must forego sharing personally identifiable information about any member of our community including information about the ideas they express, their families, lifestyles and their political and social affiliations. If you have any questions regarding whether a disclosure you wish to make regarding anyone in this course or in the university community violates that person’s privacy interests, please feel free to ask the instructor for guidance.

In addition, out of respect for each other, and in accordance with federal guidelines such as FERPA, we will not share each other’s discussion posts or assignments without permission. As instructors, we will ask you before sharing an assignment with a community sponser, for example. Similarly, you should not share your fellow classmates’ work without permission, and credit. We also ask that you not share the ideas ideas presented in this class without credit. While the class website is public, we ask that you do not take things out of context.

In addition, any tangible medium such as digital and physical documents are protected by copyright law as embodied in title 17 of the United States Code. These expressions include the work product of both: (1) your student colleagues (e.g., any assignments published here in the course environment or statements committed to text in a discussion forum); and, (2) your instructor (e.g., the syllabus, assignments, reading lists, and lectures).

Within the constraints of fair use, you may copy these copyrighted expressions for your personal intellectual use in support of your education here in the UW. Such fair use by you does not include further distribution by any means of copying, performance or presentation beyond the circle of your close acquaintances, student colleagues in this class and your family. If you have any questions regarding whether a use to which you wish to put one of these expressions violates the creator’s copyright interests, please feel free to ask the instructor for guidance.

Appropriateness

Recall that one of our course policies is to engender an inclusive environment. As such it is important that you are thoughtful about what you say or write. Please make sure that images and text you are using are school appropriate and follow the guidelines of expected behavior. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to ask the TA or your instructor. Inappropriate work submitted may be ineligible for credit on that assignment.