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Engineering Fundamentals Honor System Statements
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Pat Devens
EF 1016 |
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| Honor Policy - The Honor Code will be strictly enforced in this course. All assignments submitted shall be considered graded/individual work, unless otherwise noted. All aspects of your course work are covered by the Honor System. Any suspected violations of the Honor Code will be promptly reported. If you ever have a question on how the Honor Code is applicable to a piece of work, feel free to contact me for clarification. | |||||||||
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Tom Walker
EF 2314 |
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| Honor Code - The Virginia Tech Honor Code will be strictly enforced in this course. All assignments submitted shall be considered graded work and shall be completed on an individual basis unless otherwise stated. All aspects of one's coursework are covered by the Honor Code. Any suspected violations of the Honor Code will be reported to the Honor System. Honesty in one's academic work will develop into professional integrity. The faculty and students of Virginia Tech will not tolerate any form of academic dishonesty. | |||||||||
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Pat Devens
EF 2314 |
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| The Virginia Tech Honor Code will be enforced in this class. All assignments submitted shall be considered graded work and shall be completed on an individual basis unless otherwise stated. All aspects of one's course work are covered by the Honor Code. Any suspected violations of the Honor Code will be reported by the instructor and should be reported by any student aware of any Honor Code violation. If there are any questions related to the Honor Code and its applicability to any assigned work, please contact the instructor for clarification. Warning! Any programming assignments will be digitally preprocessed to identify suspiciously similar programs. Flagged files will be inspected visually and suspected Honor Code violations will be forwarded immediately for appropriate action without prior notification of the students involved. The preprocessing will screen programs from all students in all current and previous sections of the course. This process is being used to prevent students from copying and/or doing a "cut and paste" of someone else's computer program to ensure that course grades reflect individual, not corporate knowledge. Last semester this process generated cases involving more than 40 students with a 100% conviction rate for those cases tried before the end of the semester. Don't take any chances! Students are allowed to work together to develop the algorithmic solution to a problem using flowcharts and/or pseudocode as long as those discussions do not involve how to implement those solutions in any specific computer language such as C++ , C, Java, Fortran 90, Fortran 77, Pascal, Basic, etc. All students are expected to completely understand both the algorithm and the C++ program to implement that algorithm upon submission of their individual homework assignments. | |||||||||