Parkland College
2400 West Bradley Avenue, Champaign, Illinois 61821
Csc 275 Cisco Semester 7 - Switching 
Disruptive Behavior and Plagiarism 
Fall 2002

Disruptive Behavior

Any student that continues to behave in a disruptive manner after being asked to stop will be required to leave the classroom. Repeated disruptive behavior will be handled according to standard Parkland policies.
 

Plagiarism

I encourage students to work together and help one another, but you must actually do and understand any work you present as your own.  The Cisco administered tests and final must be taken by you personally without any notes or reference to any material while taking the tests.  Except for the tests, much of the graded work in this class will be done in groups.  Even though you are working in groups and may not actually do all the work you submit, you must thoroughly understand all of the work submitted by your group.   You must  understand it well enough to do it again, without help, at the same level of quality as the group's submission. The inability to explain, replicate, and otherwise demonstrate a thorough understanding of your submitted work is considered proof of plagiarism.  Submitting someone else's work, outside of the group, or giving your work to someone else to submit, is also certain and sufficient proof of plagiarism. You may not copy complete solutions, substantially complete solutions, or modify a solution from the public domain (such as the Internet) or from any other source and submit it as your own or your group's. The instructor reserves the right to conduct a review and re-examination of any student's work, and adjust their grade accordingly.  Each instance of plagiarism will result in an 0 grade for the plagiarized project or assignment, and also a full letter grade penalty on the student's final resulting course grade.

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  Scott Badman  Office:  B132  Phone:  353-2250  sbadman@parkland.edu  

Parkland College, 2400 W. Bradley Avenue, Champaign, IL 61821