Approver | Group Chief Executive | Approved date | 17 September 2025 |
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Responsibility | Academic Director | Effective date | 17 September 2025 |
Division | Domestic, International | Review date | 01 October 2028 |
Department | Academic | Policy Number | AAC02001 |
Performance Framework | Customer Focus |
The Institution is committed to principles of academic integrity and expects that its learners will undertake all assessments with honesty, fairness, respect, trust and responsibility. Academic integrity is essential to high-quality education and to the values and reputation of the Institution.
This policy aims to establish clear expectations and responsibilities for both the Institution’s staff and learners in promoting academic integrity. It unequivocally communicates that cheating and any form of dishonest behaviour are unacceptable and will have consequences on the students results and ultimate ability to continue their studies.
Academic misconduct: A breach of academic integrity (e.g. all types of cheating). Examples of academic misconduct include but are not limited to collusion, contract cheating, exam cheating, file sharing, impersonation, plagiarism and fabrication or falsification of data/ information, reusing previously submitted work, unauthorised and/or undeclared use of generative artificial intelligence.
Collusion: Unauthorised collaboration in preparation or presentation of work including knowingly allowing a learner’s own work to be copied by others. Collusion involves engaging in illegitimate cooperation with one or more than one learner to complete assessable work. This is different to working on group assignments that are set by lecturers, whereby authorised collaboration is encouraged and an integral part of the assessment task. Collusion includes working with a friend or a group of friends to write an essay or report that is meant to be an individual piece of work.
Contract Cheating: A type of illegal cheating where a learner requests someone else to produce all or part of an assessment task that is submitted as their own work, including paid arrangements with a third party. This can include asking another person (e.g. relative or friend) to assist with an assessment task or having them write an essay, report or some other kind of assignment, and is sometimes referred to as ‘ghost-writing’. Actions that support illegal contract cheating services are also considered breaches of academic integrity
Delegated Authority: The Academic Director (or delegate) who exercises delegated authority to resolve academic appeals, complaints, and learner disciplinary matters, including breaches of academic integrity.
Delegated Programme Lead: The academic staff member who exercises responsibility for making decisions in relation to academic misconduct for the programme. This may be a team leader, programme manager or another person nominated by the Head of Department or the Academic Director.
Exam Cheating: includes but is not limited to sitting an examination for someone else, using notes during closed-book examinations, attempting to copy from other learners, communicating with people inside or outside the exam venue while the exam is in progress, bringing prohibited items such as unapproved textbooks or calculators into the exam, using electronic devices to access information related to the exam while it is in progress.
Fabrication or Falsification of Information: Intentional creation, or unauthorised or undisclosed alteration, of any information, case studies or citation. For example, the use of artificial intelligence softwares like ChatGPT to fabricate information.
File Sharing: the unauthorised sharing of course content and assessment material on online study platforms or commercial contract cheating websites, or between individuals.
Institution: the Institution that is referred to in this policy is 911±¬ÁÏÍø Academy or Ashton Warner Academy.
Plagiarism: Submitting work that is not a learner’s own without acknowledging, citing or referencing the original sources of the work. It does not matter whether the words are changed to make them the learner’s own (e.g. use of text spinners and paraphrasing tools) or simply copied and pasted. This includes deliberate use of translation tools, synonym generators or similar, to rephrase existing content and copying/rephrasing content from samples/exemplars of assessments found in Moodle resources or using software to disguise plagiarism. When a learner is using another person’s thoughts and ideas, they must reference the source material.
Recycling or Resubmitting Work: Submitting (or resubmitting) work that has already been assessed without lecturer’s permission
Policy
Procedure
Approved policies and procedures are always intended to comply and conform with the current Ministry of Education, Tertiary Education Commission (TEC), New Zealand Qualifications Authority (NZQA) and other external agency legislation requirements and procedures.