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Academic Integrity Policy

PURPOSE

This policy includes the framework and legislative requirements for ensuring the academic integrity of staff and students at Leaders Institute (LI).


SCOPE

All staff and students

 

PRINCIPLES

LI ensures that:

  • this policy is clearly explained during student orientation, staff induction, and professional development activities;

  • students complete the academic integrity quiz during orientation and in at least one core introductory unit during their first semester;

  • students complete the Checklist to Help Ensure Academic Integrity Form that registers their awareness of this policy. Students must attach the signed Checklist to Help Ensure Academic Integrity Form to every assessment;

  • all assessment items except exams are submitted via a Turnitin™ portal on the relevant Moodle™ webpage, unless the Unit Coordinator has approved otherwise;

  • students are required to keep copies of all references and drafts of their assessment items and produce them if required by the lecturer or Unit Coordinator;

  • the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) tools must be ethical, transparent, purposeful, and uphold the principles of academic integrity and reference the use accordingly;

  • using AI tools to complete assessment or research that is not the person's original work is academic misconduct, unless the lecturer or supervisor has permitted this in writing;

  • a holistic education approach is taken for students in their first semester of enrolment and specific penalties for breach of the policy by students after their first semester of enrolment;

  • responses will be prompt, transparent, equitable, and fair;

  • penalties will be appropriate and proportionate, considering intentionality;

  • confidentiality is maintained by all parties within the constraints of allegation, investigation, and appeal processes.

 

While this policy outlines penalties for different offences, other factors may also be relevant. The designated decision maker will exercise professional judgement on a case-by-case basis. Sometimes, a more lenient or more severe penalty may be appropriate, depending on the circumstances.

 

Penalties for staff academic misconduct will take account of the fact that academic staff are expected to have learned ethical conduct earlier during their academic journey.


DEFINITIONS

Academic Integrity: The honest and respectful engagement with learning, teaching, research, and scholarship. It is an essential moral code to be upheld by the academic community inclusive of staff and students. It ensures that academic work is original and authentic and completed only with the assistance allowed.

Academic Misconduct: Behaviour that conflicts with the principles of academic integrity and leads to an unfair advantage. Types of academic misconduct may include plagiarism, contract cheating, examination cheating, duplicate submission, artificial intelligence, text-spinners, techniques to disguise plagairised work, fabrication, impersonation, academic fraud, solicitation, and promoting the breach of academic integrity, collusion, and non-compliance with exam or test instructions/requirements.


TYPES OF ACADEMIC MISCONDUCT

Academic Cheating Service: A service, commercial or otherwise, which assists students or academic staff to complete a substantial part of an assessment task or research project that students or researchers are required to personally undertake. Assignment-writing websites are academic cheating services.

Academic Cheating: Any dishonest actions to gain advantage, such as:

  • use of unauthorised assistance, materials, or equipment in undertaking an assessment items or research projects, including use of any academic cheating service;

  • being impersonated by another person, or impersonating another student;

  • acquisition and/or distribution of any assessment item or assessment item information, or part thereof, not yet released by the Unit Coordinator or Lecturer;

  • providing or receiving information that is prejudicial to fair and equitable conduct of any exam, including providing or receiving information about the content of an exam before one or more students have sat the exam;

  • tampering, or attempting to tamper with research work, exam papers, unit content, grades, or other student documentation;

  • failing to abide by any reasonable instruction or direction issued by a Unit Coordinator, Lecturer, or Tutor in relation to any assessment item or any person supervising a test or exam;

  • aiding others in breaching this policy, including but not limited to:

  • allowing one or more other students access to any material to be submitted or that has been submitted by a student in relation to an assessment item;

  • assisting another student in breaching this policy.

Collusion: Collaborating with two or more students, or a student and any other person(s) on individual (not group work) assessment item with intent to cheat, plagiarise, or engage in academic misconduct.

Contract Cheating: When a student or staff member outsources or allows their assessment or research to be done by a third party whether paid or unpaid. It also includes organising another person to take an exam, or unauthorised use of AI to complete all or part of an assessment item or research project. A third party could include, but is not limited to:

  • a commercial service, such as a tutoring company;

  • document sharing website;

  • unauthorised editing service;

  • assessment writing service;

  • current or former student of LI;

  • current or former staff member of LI;

  • family member or friend;

  • other individual or service.

Designated Decision-Maker: The person designated to make a decision in relation to the penalty for a breach of this policy. The person is identified by position, not by name.

Misrepresentation: Making false claims in relation to assessment items or research projects such as:

  • submitting an assessment item that was written in whole or in part by another person, although based on the student’s ideas (ghost writing);

  • submitting an assessment item that was wholly or substantially copy edited by another person, paid or unpaid, unless approved by the Unit Coordinator and acknowledged by the student;

  • overuse of direct quotes, even if appropriately cited, to the extent that the assessment item cannot be considered the work of the student;

  • providing references that are not cited in the body of the assessment item and/or that cannot be readily identified with the argument put forward;

  • falsifying quotes, data, or analyses used in an assessment item.

Plagiarism: This includes:

  • copying word-for-word phrases, sentences or paragraphs without citing the source (verbatim copying);

  • copying word-for-word phrases, sentences or paragraphs, changing a few words without citing the source (sham plagiarising);

  • paraphrasing phrases, sentences or paragraphs without citing the source (dishonest paraphrasing);

  • submitting an item that is the same or substantially the same as that submitted by the student in the same or another unit without permission of the Unit Coordinator and without citing the source (self-plagiarising);

  • submitting an item that is the same or substantially the same as that submitted by another student in the unit either in the same or another offer of that unit (recycling);

  • submitting an item that is wholly or substantially written by another person, paid or unpaid (contract cheating);

  • inadequate, inconsistent, or incorrect citation and/or referencing of sources, close paraphrasing and/or copying where there is no evidence of intent and where the plagiarism is not more than 5% of the text (incidental plagiarism).

Solicitation: When an individual offers, encourages, induces, or advertises for a staff member, student, or other individual to contract, commission, pay, procure, or complete on their behalf, research or assessment tasks and items that are likely to result in their use for the purpose of cheating, misrepresentation, and/or plagiarism.


OTHER ACADEMIC MISCONDUCT

This may include but is not limited to:

  • recycling or resubmitting work that has already been assessed or published without prior permission;

  • use of recorded lectures (audio and/or visual), PowerPoints, or other class notes in a way that infringes another person's privacy or intellectual property rights e.g. by publishing or distributing a recording without permission from the Lecturer;

  • offering or accepting bribes (money or sexual or other favours) e.g. for admission or for grades or research results;

  • fabrication, falsification, and misrepresentation of information, including research data and source material;

  • not meeting required research standards, including conducting research without ethics approval, or conducting research in an unethical manner.

 

DETECTION

Any person may report a complaint of academic misconduct by a student or staff member to the Lecturer, Unit Coordinator, Program Director, or relevant supervisor.


Moral and legal copyright to student assessment or research materials is vested in that person as the author. However, an LI student, by enrolling in an accredited course, provides implied consent to LI to scan assessment submissions through plagiarism detection or other methods.

 

SEVERITY OF BREACH

LI considers three levels of severity in the breach of academic integrity:

 

1. Minor Breach

Does not jeopardise the integrity of assessment. As a guideline, it affects up to approximately 15% of the assessment item in the professional judgment of the Lecturer. A minor breach is considered incidental plagiarism and is likely to reflect poor academic conduct rather than academic misconduct. It may result from misunderstanding of or limited attention to academic conventions, from carelessness or neglect, rather than intention to deceive.

 

2. Moderate Breach

This may jeopardise the integrity of assessment and is academic misconduct. As a guideline, it affects between approximately 15% to 25% of the assessment item in the professional judgment of the Unit Coordinator. This may include repeated minor breaches after a student's first semester of enrolment, disregard to academic conventions, unintended collusion, or fabricating citations with an intention to deceive.

 

3. Major Breach

This jeopardises the integrity of assessment or research item and is academic misconduct. As a guideline, it affects more than 25% of the assessment or research item in the professional judgment of the Unit Coordinator or research supervisor. This may include repeated moderate breaches, academic cheating, contract cheating, collusion, impersonation, or excessive use of AI without permission with an intention to deceive.


PROCEDURES

Where the maximum penalty for a breach is failure in one or more units, the penalty should be complemented by education as outlined above. In determining the penalty, consideration should be given to 'cascading' effects on course progression and completion.


MANAGEMENT OF STUDENT ACADEMIC MISCONDUCT

Procedures for handling academic integrity breaches of students not in their first semester of enrolment are detailed in Figure 1.


Procedures for handling minor academic integrity breaches of students not in their first semester of enrolment are detailed in Figure 2.


Procedures for handling moderate and major academic integrity breaches of students not in their first semester of enrolment are detailed in Figure 3.


Maximum penalties for student breaches of academic integrity are highlighted in Schedule 1.


RESPONSES TO STAFF BREACHES

If academic misconduct by staff is determined, the disciplinary action may follow. Concerns or complaints about a potential breach of this policy and/or the Australian Code for the Responsible Conduct of Research should report in writing and in confidence to the Vice President Academic. A failure to report suspected breaches of the Code is also considered a breach;


  • complaints made anonymously will be considered, but complainants who wish to remain anonymous will not be provided with details of the process or outcome of any investigation;

  • staff and students must not victimise or otherwise subject another person to detrimental action because of that person reporting or being the subject of a suspected breach of the Code.


Governing Board will ensure that the occurrence and nature of misconduct and breaches of academic or research integrity are monitored, and that action is taken to address underlying causes.


Factors taken into consideration may include the extent to which:

  • the researcher departed from accepted practice;

  • research participants, the wider community, animals, or the environment are, or may have been, affected by the breach;

  • there is, or may have been, incorrect information on public record;

  • the breach affects the soundness or reliability of the research;

  • the level of experience of the researcher is a consideration;

  • any institutional failures contributed to the breach;

  • any other mitigating or aggravating circumstances occurred.


If academic misconduct by staff is determined by the Responsible Officer, then disciplinary action may follow. If the staff member wishes to appeal the decision, the Staff Grievance Policy should be followed. Penalties for academic misconduct will take into account the fact that academic staff are expected to have learned ethical conduct earlier during their academic journey. Breaches may result in disciplinary action listed in the Code of Conduct Policy.


COMPLAINTS, GRIEVANCES, AND APPEALS

If a student wishes to appeal the decision, they have the right to follow the Complaints, Grievances and Appeals Policy. The student should provide as much detail as possible in support of their case, including drafts of the work in question.


If academic misconduct by a staff member is determined, then disciplinary action may follow. If the staff member wishes to appeal the decision, the Staff Grievance Policy should be followed.


FIGURE 1 HANDLING ACADEMIC INTEGRITY BREACHES OF STUDENTS IN THEIR FIRST SEMESTER OF ENROLMENT




FIGURE 2 HANDLING MINOR ACADEMIC INTEGRITY BREACHES OF STUDENTS NOT IN THEIR FIRST SEMESTER OF ENROLMENT
FIGURE 3 HANDLING MODERATE AND MAJOR ACADEMIC INTEGRITY BREACHES OF STUDENTS NOT IN THEIR FIRST SEMESTER OF ENROLMENT



SCHEDULE 1 MAXIMUM PENALTIES FOR ACADEMIC BREACHES


Type of Breach

Severity of Breach

Maximum Penalty

Designated Decision Maker

Notes

Breach by student in their first semester of enrolment

Minor

Penality

Lecturer

Student may lose marks where citation and/or referencing is an element in a marking rubric.

Breach by student in their first semester of enrolment

Moderate or major

Penalty

Unit Coordinator

Student may lose marks where citation and/or referencing is an element in a marking rubric. The student may receive a mark of zero if they do not attend a meeting and/or fail to resubmit or resit by specified date. Maximum marks for resubmit or resit is 50%. Breach noted on student file.

All other breaches detected prior to graduation

Minor

Penalty

Lecturer

Student may lose marks where citation and/or referencing is an element in a marking rubric. The student may receive a mark of zero if they do not attend a meeting and/or fail to resubmit the assessment by the specified date. Maximum mark for resubmit is 50%. Breach noted on Student Academic Misconduct and Register student file.

Repeated minor breaches, single unit

Fail assessment item

Penality

Unit Coordinator

Breach noted on student file

Repeated minor breach, multiple units

Fail units

Penalty

Program Director

Breach noted in Student Academic Misconduct Register and on student file

Repeated moderate breach, single unit

Fail units

Penalty

Program Director

Breach noted in Student Academic Misconduct Register and on student file

Repeated moderate breach, multiple units

Fail units

Penality

Program Director

Breach noted in Student Academic Misconduct Register and on student file

Repeated major, single unit

Exclusion for up to one year

Penalty

Program Director

Breach noted in Student Academic Misconduct Register and on student file

Repeated major breach, multiple units

Exclusion for up to two years

Penalty

Program Director

Breach noted in Student Academic Misconduct Register and on student file

Moderate or major breach after a period of exclusion

Exclusion for up to three years and/or cancellation of enrolment

Penalty

Program Director

Breach noted in Student Academic Misconduct Register and on student file

Any breach detected after graduation for which the maximum penalty would be exclusion and/or cancellation of enrolment

 

Withdrawal of testamur

Governing Board, on recommendation of Academic Board and Vice President Academic

The graduate is invited to surrender the testamur. If they decline, legal notice of withdrawal of the testamur shall be served at the last-known address of the graduate. Student file noted.


PURPOSE

This policy includes the framework and legislative requirements for ensuring the academic integrity of staff and students at Leaders Institute (LI).


SCOPE

All staff and students

 

PRINCIPLES

LI ensures that:

  • this policy is clearly explained during student orientation, staff induction, and professional development activities;

  • students complete the academic integrity quiz during orientation and in at least one core introductory unit during their first semester;

  • students complete the Checklist to Help Ensure Academic Integrity Form that registers their awareness of this policy. Students must attach the signed Checklist to Help Ensure Academic Integrity Form to every assessment;

  • all assessment items except exams are submitted via a Turnitin™ portal on the relevant Moodle™ webpage, unless the Unit Coordinator has approved otherwise;

  • students are required to keep copies of all references and drafts of their assessment items and produce them if required by the lecturer or Unit Coordinator;

  • the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) tools must be ethical, transparent, purposeful, and uphold the principles of academic integrity and reference the use accordingly;

  • using AI tools to complete assessment or research that is not the person's original work is academic misconduct, unless the lecturer or supervisor has permitted this in writing;

  • a holistic education approach is taken for students in their first semester of enrolment and specific penalties for breach of the policy by students after their first semester of enrolment;

  • responses will be prompt, transparent, equitable, and fair;

  • penalties will be appropriate and proportionate, considering intentionality;

  • confidentiality is maintained by all parties within the constraints of allegation, investigation, and appeal processes.

 

While this policy outlines penalties for different offences, other factors may also be relevant. The designated decision maker will exercise professional judgement on a case-by-case basis. Sometimes, a more lenient or more severe penalty may be appropriate, depending on the circumstances.

 

Penalties for staff academic misconduct will take account of the fact that academic staff are expected to have learned ethical conduct earlier during their academic journey.


DEFINITIONS

Academic Integrity: The honest and respectful engagement with learning, teaching, research, and scholarship. It is an essential moral code to be upheld by the academic community inclusive of staff and students. It ensures that academic work is original and authentic and completed only with the assistance allowed.

Academic Misconduct: Behaviour that conflicts with the principles of academic integrity and leads to an unfair advantage. Types of academic misconduct may include plagiarism, contract cheating, examination cheating, duplicate submission, artificial intelligence, text-spinners, techniques to disguise plagairised work, fabrication, impersonation, academic fraud, solicitation, and promoting the breach of academic integrity, collusion, and non-compliance with exam or test instructions/requirements.


TYPES OF ACADEMIC MISCONDUCT

Academic Cheating Service: A service, commercial or otherwise, which assists students or academic staff to complete a substantial part of an assessment task or research project that students or researchers are required to personally undertake. Assignment-writing websites are academic cheating services.

Academic Cheating: Any dishonest actions to gain advantage, such as:

  • use of unauthorised assistance, materials, or equipment in undertaking an assessment items or research projects, including use of any academic cheating service;

  • being impersonated by another person, or impersonating another student;

  • acquisition and/or distribution of any assessment item or assessment item information, or part thereof, not yet released by the Unit Coordinator or Lecturer;

  • providing or receiving information that is prejudicial to fair and equitable conduct of any exam, including providing or receiving information about the content of an exam before one or more students have sat the exam;

  • tampering, or attempting to tamper with research work, exam papers, unit content, grades, or other student documentation;

  • failing to abide by any reasonable instruction or direction issued by a Unit Coordinator, Lecturer, or Tutor in relation to any assessment item or any person supervising a test or exam;

  • aiding others in breaching this policy, including but not limited to:

  • allowing one or more other students access to any material to be submitted or that has been submitted by a student in relation to an assessment item;

  • assisting another student in breaching this policy.

Collusion: Collaborating with two or more students, or a student and any other person(s) on individual (not group work) assessment item with intent to cheat, plagiarise, or engage in academic misconduct.

Contract Cheating: When a student or staff member outsources or allows their assessment or research to be done by a third party whether paid or unpaid. It also includes organising another person to take an exam, or unauthorised use of AI to complete all or part of an assessment item or research project. A third party could include, but is not limited to:

  • a commercial service, such as a tutoring company;

  • document sharing website;

  • unauthorised editing service;

  • assessment writing service;

  • current or former student of LI;

  • current or former staff member of LI;

  • family member or friend;

  • other individual or service.

Designated Decision-Maker: The person designated to make a decision in relation to the penalty for a breach of this policy. The person is identified by position, not by name.

Misrepresentation: Making false claims in relation to assessment items or research projects such as:

  • submitting an assessment item that was written in whole or in part by another person, although based on the student’s ideas (ghost writing);

  • submitting an assessment item that was wholly or substantially copy edited by another person, paid or unpaid, unless approved by the Unit Coordinator and acknowledged by the student;

  • overuse of direct quotes, even if appropriately cited, to the extent that the assessment item cannot be considered the work of the student;

  • providing references that are not cited in the body of the assessment item and/or that cannot be readily identified with the argument put forward;

  • falsifying quotes, data, or analyses used in an assessment item.

Plagiarism: This includes:

  • copying word-for-word phrases, sentences or paragraphs without citing the source (verbatim copying);

  • copying word-for-word phrases, sentences or paragraphs, changing a few words without citing the source (sham plagiarising);

  • paraphrasing phrases, sentences or paragraphs without citing the source (dishonest paraphrasing);

  • submitting an item that is the same or substantially the same as that submitted by the student in the same or another unit without permission of the Unit Coordinator and without citing the source (self-plagiarising);

  • submitting an item that is the same or substantially the same as that submitted by another student in the unit either in the same or another offer of that unit (recycling);

  • submitting an item that is wholly or substantially written by another person, paid or unpaid (contract cheating);

  • inadequate, inconsistent, or incorrect citation and/or referencing of sources, close paraphrasing and/or copying where there is no evidence of intent and where the plagiarism is not more than 5% of the text (incidental plagiarism).

Solicitation: When an individual offers, encourages, induces, or advertises for a staff member, student, or other individual to contract, commission, pay, procure, or complete on their behalf, research or assessment tasks and items that are likely to result in their use for the purpose of cheating, misrepresentation, and/or plagiarism.


OTHER ACADEMIC MISCONDUCT

This may include but is not limited to:

  • recycling or resubmitting work that has already been assessed or published without prior permission;

  • use of recorded lectures (audio and/or visual), PowerPoints, or other class notes in a way that infringes another person's privacy or intellectual property rights e.g. by publishing or distributing a recording without permission from the Lecturer;

  • offering or accepting bribes (money or sexual or other favours) e.g. for admission or for grades or research results;

  • fabrication, falsification, and misrepresentation of information, including research data and source material;

  • not meeting required research standards, including conducting research without ethics approval, or conducting research in an unethical manner.

 

DETECTION

Any person may report a complaint of academic misconduct by a student or staff member to the Lecturer, Unit Coordinator, Program Director, or relevant supervisor.


Moral and legal copyright to student assessment or research materials is vested in that person as the author. However, an LI student, by enrolling in an accredited course, provides implied consent to LI to scan assessment submissions through plagiarism detection or other methods.

 

SEVERITY OF BREACH

LI considers three levels of severity in the breach of academic integrity:

 

1. Minor Breach

Does not jeopardise the integrity of assessment. As a guideline, it affects up to approximately 15% of the assessment item in the professional judgment of the Lecturer. A minor breach is considered incidental plagiarism and is likely to reflect poor academic conduct rather than academic misconduct. It may result from misunderstanding of or limited attention to academic conventions, from carelessness or neglect, rather than intention to deceive.

 

2. Moderate Breach

This may jeopardise the integrity of assessment and is academic misconduct. As a guideline, it affects between approximately 15% to 25% of the assessment item in the professional judgment of the Unit Coordinator. This may include repeated minor breaches after a student's first semester of enrolment, disregard to academic conventions, unintended collusion, or fabricating citations with an intention to deceive.

 

3. Major Breach

This jeopardises the integrity of assessment or research item and is academic misconduct. As a guideline, it affects more than 25% of the assessment or research item in the professional judgment of the Unit Coordinator or research supervisor. This may include repeated moderate breaches, academic cheating, contract cheating, collusion, impersonation, or excessive use of AI without permission with an intention to deceive.


PROCEDURES

Where the maximum penalty for a breach is failure in one or more units, the penalty should be complemented by education as outlined above. In determining the penalty, consideration should be given to 'cascading' effects on course progression and completion.


MANAGEMENT OF STUDENT ACADEMIC MISCONDUCT

Procedures for handling academic integrity breaches of students not in their first semester of enrolment are detailed in Figure 1.


Procedures for handling minor academic integrity breaches of students not in their first semester of enrolment are detailed in Figure 2.


Procedures for handling moderate and major academic integrity breaches of students not in their first semester of enrolment are detailed in Figure 3.


Maximum penalties for student breaches of academic integrity are highlighted in Schedule 1.


RESPONSES TO STAFF BREACHES

If academic misconduct by staff is determined, the disciplinary action may follow. Concerns or complaints about a potential breach of this policy and/or the Australian Code for the Responsible Conduct of Research should report in writing and in confidence to the Vice President Academic. A failure to report suspected breaches of the Code is also considered a breach;


  • complaints made anonymously will be considered, but complainants who wish to remain anonymous will not be provided with details of the process or outcome of any investigation;

  • staff and students must not victimise or otherwise subject another person to detrimental action because of that person reporting or being the subject of a suspected breach of the Code.


Governing Board will ensure that the occurrence and nature of misconduct and breaches of academic or research integrity are monitored, and that action is taken to address underlying causes.


Factors taken into consideration may include the extent to which:

  • the researcher departed from accepted practice;

  • research participants, the wider community, animals, or the environment are, or may have been, affected by the breach;

  • there is, or may have been, incorrect information on public record;

  • the breach affects the soundness or reliability of the research;

  • the level of experience of the researcher is a consideration;

  • any institutional failures contributed to the breach;

  • any other mitigating or aggravating circumstances occurred.


If academic misconduct by staff is determined by the Responsible Officer, then disciplinary action may follow. If the staff member wishes to appeal the decision, the Staff Grievance Policy should be followed. Penalties for academic misconduct will take into account the fact that academic staff are expected to have learned ethical conduct earlier during their academic journey. Breaches may result in disciplinary action listed in the Code of Conduct Policy.


COMPLAINTS, GRIEVANCES, AND APPEALS

If a student wishes to appeal the decision, they have the right to follow the Complaints, Grievances and Appeals Policy. The student should provide as much detail as possible in support of their case, including drafts of the work in question.


If academic misconduct by a staff member is determined, then disciplinary action may follow. If the staff member wishes to appeal the decision, the Staff Grievance Policy should be followed.


FIGURE 1 HANDLING ACADEMIC INTEGRITY BREACHES OF STUDENTS IN THEIR FIRST SEMESTER OF ENROLMENT




FIGURE 2 HANDLING MINOR ACADEMIC INTEGRITY BREACHES OF STUDENTS NOT IN THEIR FIRST SEMESTER OF ENROLMENT
FIGURE 3 HANDLING MODERATE AND MAJOR ACADEMIC INTEGRITY BREACHES OF STUDENTS NOT IN THEIR FIRST SEMESTER OF ENROLMENT



SCHEDULE 1 MAXIMUM PENALTIES FOR ACADEMIC BREACHES


Type of Breach

Severity of Breach

Maximum Penalty

Designated Decision Maker

Notes

Breach by student in their first semester of enrolment

Minor

Penality

Lecturer

Student may lose marks where citation and/or referencing is an element in a marking rubric.

Breach by student in their first semester of enrolment

Moderate or major

Penalty

Unit Coordinator

Student may lose marks where citation and/or referencing is an element in a marking rubric. The student may receive a mark of zero if they do not attend a meeting and/or fail to resubmit or resit by specified date. Maximum marks for resubmit or resit is 50%. Breach noted on student file.

All other breaches detected prior to graduation

Minor

Penalty

Lecturer

Student may lose marks where citation and/or referencing is an element in a marking rubric. The student may receive a mark of zero if they do not attend a meeting and/or fail to resubmit the assessment by the specified date. Maximum mark for resubmit is 50%. Breach noted on Student Academic Misconduct and Register student file.

Repeated minor breaches, single unit

Fail assessment item

Penality

Unit Coordinator

Breach noted on student file

Repeated minor breach, multiple units

Fail units

Penalty

Program Director

Breach noted in Student Academic Misconduct Register and on student file

Repeated moderate breach, single unit

Fail units

Penalty

Program Director

Breach noted in Student Academic Misconduct Register and on student file

Repeated moderate breach, multiple units

Fail units

Penality

Program Director

Breach noted in Student Academic Misconduct Register and on student file

Repeated major, single unit

Exclusion for up to one year

Penalty

Program Director

Breach noted in Student Academic Misconduct Register and on student file

Repeated major breach, multiple units

Exclusion for up to two years

Penalty

Program Director

Breach noted in Student Academic Misconduct Register and on student file

Moderate or major breach after a period of exclusion

Exclusion for up to three years and/or cancellation of enrolment

Penalty

Program Director

Breach noted in Student Academic Misconduct Register and on student file

Any breach detected after graduation for which the maximum penalty would be exclusion and/or cancellation of enrolment

 

Withdrawal of testamur

Governing Board, on recommendation of Academic Board and Vice President Academic

The graduate is invited to surrender the testamur. If they decline, legal notice of withdrawal of the testamur shall be served at the last-known address of the graduate. Student file noted.


Policy Owner

Chair, Learning and Teaching Committee

Approval Date

7 March 2024

Approving Body

Academic Board

Review Date

7 March 2029

Endorsing Body

Academic Board

Version

3.0

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