«From our perspective we have done due diligence...
Academic misconduct does not happen very often, and when it does, we consider it to be a very serious matter.»
Not exact matches
The NCAA doesn't care about
academic misconduct.
Discussing and debating these hypos helped me show students that behaviors such as letting non-productive groupmates take credit for work that they didn't perform or simply failing to cite sources properly could also constitute
academic misconduct.
When
does academic misconduct also become criminal fraud?
Most universities take
academic misconduct quite seriously, and
do not
do whitewash, first because they are honest, and second, because if they don't, the «huge hit» has real consequences.
The vast majority of people who are paying attention don't have the first clue about
academic misconduct.
I don't use the words
academic misconduct lightly.
b) In academe, mistakes get made, and under no circumstances
does one want to have
academic misconduct claimed for honest errors.
As for the Climategate emails and what you claim were «whitewashes,» I have a question for you — when you were at Columbia or Harvard, if you'd been accused of
academic misconduct as severe as what Michael Mann was accused of,
do you think that either institution would have whitewashed your investigation for any reason whatsoever?
I have other stuff to
do right now, but I'm sure Northwestern and Wharton will be pleased to receive
academic misconduct complaints for this high - profile paper.
It would be far better if Plimer were to face the kind of examination that Lomborg
did before the DCSD over The Skeptical Environmentalist and if University of Adelaide were to examine whether he met their tests for
academic misconduct.
I
do not accept the characterization of the University's relationship with its students as a purely contractual matter, particularly when it comes to discipline for non
academic misconduct.
We reserve the right to reject any applicant that
does not meet our standards or terminate an applicant for
academic misconduct or failure to make required program payments.