Limits of Collaboration:
We recommend that you first attempt to solve the homework problems alone, using your textbook, your notes, and the resources of WileyPLUS. If you need more help, you may consult your instructor, your recitation TA, a tutor in the Help Lab, or other persons. However, we require that you write your homework solutions unaided.
No collaboration of any type is permitted on quizzes or exams.
Classroom Behavior:
The classroom behavior policy
and the associated
procedures adopted by the university
can be found at
http://www.colorado.edu/policies/classbehavior.html
Religious Holidays:
If, because of religious obligations, a student has a conflict
with scheduled exams, assignments, or other required attendance,
the student should notify his/her instructor
preferably during the first two weeks of class
(but at least two weeks in advance of
the conflict) to request special accommodation.
We will provide the opportunity for a makeup exam
or an equivalent assignment, or arrange for an increased
flexibility in assignment due date.
See
http://www.colorado.edu/policies/fac_relig.html
Students with Disabilities:
Students with disabilities who qualify for academic accommodations
must provide a letter from Disability Services
(303-492-8671, Willard 322) and discuss
specific needs with their instructors,
preferably during the first two weeks of class.
Disability Services determines accommodations based on documented
disabilities. Their web page can be found at
http://www.colorado.edu/disabilityservices
Honor Code:
The Student Honor Code system, implemented in all
schools and colleges, can be found at
http://www.colorado.edu/policies/honor.html
and
http://www.colorado.edu/academics/honorcode/
Sanctions for honor violations may include: a failing grade
for a particular assignment; a failing grade for a particular
course; and/or suspension for various lengths of time or
permanent expulsion from the university.
The university administration has asked faculty to
provide very clear, explicit and detailed instructions about
what constitutes plagiarism.
In this course we will adhere to the definition drafted by the CU Law School:
Plagiarism is the use of any written material which is
submitted in a manner which
purports or suggests that it is the work and effort of
the person submitting it and
that it was prepared by him or her as part or all of
the task of completing the
assignment, but which material is in substance the work of
another or is material
previously prepared by the student and which was previously submitted for,
and which received, academic credit of any kind and the subsequent use of such
material was not, in advance, specifically authorized by the
faculty member for
whom the work was being done.
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