20,647 research outputs found
Criminal intent or cognitive dissonance: how does student self plagiarism fit into academic integrity?
The discourse of plagiarism is speckled with punitive terms not out of place in a police officer's notes: detection, prevention, misconduct, rules, regulations, conventions, transgression, consequences, deter, trap, etc. This crime and punishment paradigm tends to be the norm in academic settings. The learning and teaching paradigm assumes that students are not filled with criminal intent, but rather are confused by the novel academic culture and its values. The discourse of learning and teaching includes: development, guidance, acknowledge, scholarly practice, communicate, familiarity, culture. Depending on the paradigm adopted, universities, teachers, and students will either focus on policies, punishments, and ways to cheat the system or on program design, assessments, and assimilating the values of academia. Self plagiarism is a pivotal issue that polarises these two paradigms. Viewed from a crime and punishment paradigm, self plagiarism is an intentional act of evading the required workload for a course by re-using previous work. Within a learning and teaching paradigm, self plagiarism is an oxymoron. We would like to explore the differences between these two paradigms by using self plagiarism as a focal point
Internationalization Self-Study
Sacred Heart University (SHU) was accepted into the 2013-2015 American Council on Education (ACE) Internationalization Laboratory program. This is the report prepared by the Internationalization Task Force
Report on the Sacred Heart University Participation in the ACE Internationalization Laboratory By the American Council on Education Peer Review Visit Team February 25-27, 2015
This report is based on a visit to Sacred Heart University (SHU) by an American Council on Education (ACE) peer review team on February 25-27, 2015. This report also draws upon the document Internationalization Self-Study (December 2014) provided to the peer review team in advance
Open educational resources : conversations in cyberspace
172 p. : ill. ; 25 cm.Libro ElectrĂłnicoEducation systems today face two major challenges: expanding the reach of education and improving its quality. Traditional solutions will not suffice, especially in the context of today's knowledge-intensive societies. The Open Educational Resources movement offers one solution for extending the reach of education and expanding learning opportunities. The goal of the movement is to equalize access to knowledge worldwide through openly and freely available online high-quality content. Over the course of two years, the international community came together in a series of online discussion forums to discuss the concept of Open Educational Resources and its potential. This publication makes the background papers and reports from those discussions available in print.--Publisher's description.A first forum : presenting the open educational resources (OER) movement. Open educational resources : an introductory note / Sally Johnstone --
Providing OER and related issues : an introductory note / Anne Margulies, ... [et al.] --
Using OER and related issues : in introductory note / Mohammed-Nabil Sabry, ... [et al.] --
Discussion highlights / Paul Albright --
Ongoing discussion. A research agenda for OER : discussion highlights / Kim Tucker and Peter Bateman --
A 'do-it-yourself' resource for OER : discussion highlights / Boris Vukovic --
Free and open source software (FOSS) and OER --
A second forum : discussing the OECD study of OER. Mapping procedures and users / Jan HylĂŠn --
Why individuals and institutions share and use OER / Jan HylĂŠn --
Discussion highlights / Alexa Joyce --
Priorities for action. Open educational resources : the way forward / Susan D'Antoni
The Bulletin, Undergraduate Catalog 2008-2009 (2008)
https://red.mnstate.edu/bulletins/1093/thumbnail.jp
The Bulletin, Undergraduate Catalog 2013-2014 (2013)
https://red.mnstate.edu/bulletins/1096/thumbnail.jp
The Bulletin, Undergraduate Catalog 2009-2011 (2009)
https://red.mnstate.edu/bulletins/1094/thumbnail.jp
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