It is not an Integrity Violation to copy words from the Internet into a research paper as long as you
include the source in your bibliography.
FALSE: To avoid plagiarism, the words MUST be put between quotation marks (or formatted in a block quotation).
A citation alone, even a citation in the text, is not enough. A citation alone means only that the cited source makes the same point or provides
some support for that part of the paper.
It is an Integrity Violation for two students to turn in identical papers even if the professor said it was okay
to work together.
TRUE: The professor would actually have to say that it is okay to turn in identical papers.
You are guilty of an Integrity Violation if another student cheats from your test paper, even if you are unaware
the student is cheating.
FALSE: The Code does not require you to prevent someone else from cheating. However, it does prohibit helping
someone else cheat. Also, the "clean heart, empty head" defense can only go so far: a student can be found guilty of helping someone cheat if a
hearing panel determines that a reasonable student should have known his or her actions were helping someone cheat.
It is an integrity violation to turn in the same paper for two different classes.
TRUE: (Unless the second instructor permits it.) The idea is that each assignment is a new opportunity to learn,
not just recycle old work.
It is an integrity violation to plagiarize a paper, even if you did not intend to cheat.
TRUE: Students are expected to know the rules when they get to OU. The "I just messed up the citations" excuse
is especially unconvincing when the offense involves lots of copying.