Page 54 - Keys to College Success
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KEY       1.6    You benefit from academic integrity.




                        Earned knowledge                           Mastering integrity now
                      equals lasting knowledge                     makes it a lifelong skill
                                                   Why
                                                 Academic
                                                Integrity Is
                                                                                                                       The Rewards of College
                                                 Worth It
                     Standing up for your beliefs                   Doing the right thing
                      earns respect from others                     increases self-esteem






                   Violations of academic integrity include turning in previously submitted work,
               using unauthorized devices during an exam, providing unethical aid to another stu-
               dent, and downloading passages or papers from the Internet. Consequences of vio-
               lations vary from school to school and include academic integrity seminars, grade
               reduction or course failure, suspension, or expulsion. Many schools have legal sys-
               tems that investigate and try accused students in a court-like atmosphere, with
               decisions made by honor council members (often a mix of students and faculty
               members).
                   When you enrolled, you agreed to abide by your school’s code of honor or aca-
               demic integrity policy. Find it in your student handbook, school website, or in your
               syllabus, and read it thoroughly so you know exactly what it asks of you. Measure the
               consequences of violating the policy against the risk of working hard to complete your
               degree with integrity. Which reward would you choose?
                   It may seem that a slip here and there is no big deal. However, as Professor Taylor
               states in his letter, “Personal integrity is . . . a quality of character we need to nurture,
               and this requires practice in both meanings of that word (as in practice the piano and
               practice a profession). We can only be a person of integrity if we practice it every
               day.”  Finally, know that a growth mindset can help. Because academic integrity
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               comes naturally to students who see struggle and failure as opportunities to learn,
               maintaining a growth mindset promotes academic integrity and makes its rewards
               more obvious (see Key 1.6).

               Self-Sufficiency

               Many students have a “helicopter parent” (one who hovers over and monitors a child)
               or a “Velcro parent” (one who is constantly calling, texting, or emailing, unable to
               unhook). Despite loving intentions, both types of interaction can hamper a child’s abil-
               ity to function independently. This can have negative repercussions for adult life, where
               children need to make their own way through the minefield of life’s challenges and
               adversities.
                   College is an ideal time to learn how to advocate for yourself in pursuit of the
               reward of independence and confidence. When you are tired, overwhelmed, strug-
               gling with coursework or a personal relationship, butting heads with an instructor,
               or forgetting due dates for tests or assignments, you are now your own first line of
               defense.
                   When a problem appears, take the risk and ask an instructor, advisor, counselor,
               dean, RA, or friend for help. The reward is the ability to benefit from resources around
               you, one that will use throughout your life as you encounter workplace and personal



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