Grade and Paper Requirements:
What is required for an A-grade?
Requirements for research papers
Courses - September 2009:
LBCL 397 -- The Sciences and Society
PHIL 220 -- Introduction to the Philosophy of Science
SCOL 270 -- Historical, Philosophical and Social Aspects of Science
Courses - January 2010:
LBCL 397 -- The Sciences and Society
PHIL 328 -- Contemporary Revolutions in Science: Space and Time
SCOL 270 -- Historical, Philosophical and Social Aspects of Science
Plagiarism:
The most common offense under the Academic Code of Conduct is plagiarism which the Code defines as "the presentation of the work of another person as one's own or without proper acknowledgment."
This could be material copied word for word from books, journals, internet sites, professor's course notes, etc. It could be material that is paraphrased but closely resembles the original source. It could be the work of a fellow student, for example, an answer on a quiz, data for a lab report, a paper or assignment completed by another student. It might be a paper purchased through one of the many available sources. Plagiarism does not refer to words alone - it can also refer to copying images, graphs, tables, and ideas. "Presentation" is not limited to written work. It also includes oral presentations, computer assignments and artistic works. Finally, if you translate the work of another person into French or English and do not cite the source, this is also plagiarism.
In Simple Words:
DO NOT COPY, PARAPHRASE OR TRANSLATE ANYTHING FROM ANYWHERE WITHOUT SAYING FROM WHERE YOU OBTAINED IT!
Source: The Academic Integrity Website
Links:
Science and History and Philosophy of Science Links
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