Publication:

Teaching Academic Honesty in CS50

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2020-03

Published Version

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

ACM
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Citation

Malan, David J., Brian Yu, and Doug Lloyd. 2020. Teaching Academic Honesty in CS50. In Proceedings of the 51st ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education (SIGCSE ’20), 282-288. New York, NY: Association for Computing Machinery.

Abstract

We aspire to teach academic honesty in CS50 at Harvard University not only by addressing academic dishonesty when it occurs but by addressing it before it does. By way of communication, course- and campus-wide awareness of policy, just-in-time prompts, interventional conversations, and problem sets have we tried to preempt submission of plagiarized work. But few interventions have had significant or lasting effects on the number of instances thereof. Most impactful has been the addition of one sentence to the course’s syllabus, a “regret clause” that encourages students to come forward within 72 hours of some dishonest act on their part, before the course itself is even aware. While we might zero the work in question in such cases, we commit to not escalating the matter further to the university’s honor council, where the outcome might instead be admonishment, probation, or even required withdrawal from the university itself. We instead advise students on how best to move forward and connect them as needed with support structures on campus for academics and mental health. Since 2014 have 89 students invoked the clause, between 1% and 3% of the course’s student body each year.

Description

Other Available Sources

Research Data

Keywords

academic honesty, academic dishonesty, code, ethics, honor council, plagiarism, policy

Terms of Use

Metadata Only

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Related Stories