Academic Dishonesty

Academic dishonesty is cheating or plagiarism that occurs within an educational setting. It occurs as early as kindergarten and as late as college; very rarely, graduate students and professors commit academic dishonesty. Punishments for academic dishonesty vary according to the age of the party involved and the nature of the infraction. In high school, a standard penalty for cheating is a failing grade, but in college it often results in expulsion or worse consequences: in rare instances, middle-aged college professors have been fired when it was discovered that they plagiarized during college or graduate school. All parties involved in the dishonesty—not just the individual whose grade in increased by it—are usually punished. In a 2002 plagiarism scandal at the University of Virginia, 45 students were expelled and three graduates' degrees were revoked.

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