Academic Integrity (AI) is a concept used to ensure that a student's work is truly their own work. As you work in the course(s) please do not cut, copy, or plagiarize internet content or the work of your online classmates. A student who upholds a high standard of academic integrity maintains that the work he or she turns in is authentic and true to the knowledge he or she has acquired. To help you get off to a successful start in the class, please view the Academic Integrity Lesson and take the Academic Integrity Quiz below. We also have included more information about AI to ensure your understanding. If you have any questions, reach out to your teacher!
⭐Please complete the Academic Integrity Lesson and Quiz as your first assignment. You will earn full credit for watching all the videos, answering all the questions, and following directions for submission.
Academic Integrity means...
Your work on each assignment will be completely your own
Your collaboration with another classmate on any assignment will be pre-approved by your instructor
You will not practice plagiarism in any form
You will not allow others to copy your work
You will not misuse content from the Internet
Make sure you have reviewed the slides from the Academic Integrity Lesson and have your notes ready for this quiz. Once you complete this quiz successfully, you will submit your grade/score of the quiz to the Enrichment Assessment in your Gradebook.
CLICK HERE to review the tools we use, here at FLVS, in dealing with academic integrity. You can also find definitions, roles and responsibilities of all parties, along with the matrix of integrity interventions.
Plagiarism is copying or using ideas or words (from another person, an online classmate, or an Internet or print source) and presenting them as your own.
Some examples of plagiarism include:
Buying a paper from a research service or term paper mill.
Turning in another student's work without that student's knowledge.
Turning in a paper a peer has written for the student.
Copying a paper from a source text without proper acknowledgment.
Copying materials from a source text, supplying proper documentation, but leaving out quotation marks.
Paraphrasing materials from a source text without appropriate documentation.
With the Internet, another type of plagiarism needs to be listed: Turning in a paper from a "free term paper" website.
Florida Virtual School takes the integrity and authenticity of student work very seriously. Do not cut, copy, or plagiarize internet content or the work of your online classmates. FLVS instructors utilize technologies to check for authenticity. Copying, knowingly allowing others to copy from you, and/or misusing the internet content could result in removal from your course. Academic integrity is the cornerstone of learning at FLVS. Because of its preeminence in all our instruction, there are a variety of tools that we use in ensuring the integrity of student work.
Among these tools are:
Plagiarism Detection Tool
This internet tool compares student work against a variety of databases. The FLVS Learning Management System is now integrated with Turnitin.com and most work is automatically uploaded to the system. This database compares students’ work against other students’ work, as well as work found on the internet.
Academic Integrity Database
FLVS maintains its own database of student integrity incidents. This database is used to monitor the number of student integrity issues.
Teacher Expertise
FLVS instructors have extensive classroom experience. Their expertise is often a guide in identifying the level of originality in student work.
Discussion-based Assessments
As a means of ensuring comprehension and integrity, each course contains built-in assignments that are designated to be completed verbally during a discussion between a teacher and student. A student who does not complete and pass every discussion-based assessment in the course is ineligible for course credit. Additional discussions may be conducted randomly throughout the course to assess mastery of content and authenticity of student work. To ensure integrity, it may be required that discussion-based assessments be completed using a video application.
Proctored Exams
FLVS may, at its discretion, require a proctored segment exam for any student on a situational basis. Academic Integrity proctored exams must be successfully passed (grade of 59.5% or higher) on the first attempt for a student to be eligible for course credit.
Random Proctored Exams
Students are randomly chosen to take a proctored segment exam. For more information, please visit http://www.flvs.net/myFLVS/student-handbook/Pages/AcademicIntegrity.aspx
Academic Integrity Hotline/Email
Community members, school counselors, parents, and students can call or email to report any academic integrity related issue anonymously.
All of your written work is automatically filtered through the Turn It In system to check for similarities with other work. This means anything you type, including in the student comment sections, on exams, and uploaded documents are checked for academic integrity. This even includes the direct use of course content.
Once you submit your work, go back to your Gradebook to check your Turn It In results by clicking on your assignment and scrolling down to the questions you answered. You will see your Turn It In results, as seen below:
Please be aware that all FLVS instructors utilize a myriad of technologies to check student work for authenticity, including but not limited to the upload of student work to TurnItIn.com. In order to maintain the integrity of all FLVS grades, instructors may choose to facilitate random oral assessments and/or proctored exams. If an instructor confirms that a student has plagiarized work in any manner, the student will be subject to consequences determined by FLVS administration and may be removed from the course with a failing grade.
When research is involved for class work, most often you will be asked to either cite, quote, paraphrase, or summarize your findings. These are appropriate ways to acknowledge other people's findings.
cite: to quote as an authority or example (© 2003 yourdictionary.com)
quote: to repeat or cite, as for authority or illustration (© 2003 Webster's)
paraphrase: a re-statement of the meaning of a passage of work, etc. (© 2003 Webster's)
summarize: a brief account of the substance or essential points of something spoken or written (© 2003 Webster's)
Tips on how to avoid plagiarism:
Use the Landmarks Citation Machine to easily cite your resources. Simply select the type of resource you used, enter the requested information about that resource, and then copy and paste the MLA citation for the resource from the Citation Machine.
Whenever you quote, paraphrase or summarize other people's ideas, then it is appropriate to acknowledge the source.
When quoting someone's ideas, you should place the idea in quotation marks, and then make a note in parentheses next to it citing the author, source, and date.
Always think…. did this idea originally come from me or from someone else? If it originally came from someone else, then remember to play it safe and cite the content with the author and source.