THE AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY

 

Academic Misconduct Statute 2014

 

ACADEMIC MISCONDUCT RULES 2014

 

The Vice-Chancellor of The Australian National University makes these Rules under section 3 of the Academic Misconduct Statute 2014.

 

Dated: 18 December 2014.

 

 

 

 

Professor Ian Young AO

VICE-CHANCELLOR

 

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Part 1 PRELIMINARY

1 Name of Rules and commencement

2 Application of these Rules

3 The academic integrity principle

4 Interpretation

Part 2 Student Academic Conduct

5 The academic integrity principle

6 Academic misconduct

7 Plagiarism

8 Collusion

9 Poor academic practice

Part 3 interim action

10 Interim exclusion by the Deputy Vice-Chancellor

11 Exclusion of student from attendance at an examination venue

12 Enrolment not terminated by interim action

Part 4 Report of academic misconduct

13 Alleged academic misconduct

14 Reference of alleged academic misconduct to the Registrar

Part 5 Initial Review

15 Allegations of academic misconduct to be reviewed

16 Power of Registrar to initiate inquiry without initial review

17 Decision by review officer to terminate the process

18 Notification of initial review

19 Meeting with the review officer

20 Decision by the review officer

21 Action to be taken if poor academic practice is found

Part 6 Inquiry

22 Registrar to refer matter to an inquiry officer

23 Decision by the inquiry officer not to conduct an inquiry

24 Options available to the inquiry officer

25 Transfer by an inquiry officer

26 Meeting with the student

27 Notice of inquiry by inquiry officer

28 Procedure at an inquiry

29 Student’s rights at an inquiry

30 Decision by the inquiry officer

31 Penalty for academic misconduct

32 Student undertakings

33 Re-enrolment following suspension

Part 7 Appeals and Review

34 Review by the Appeals Committee

35 Review by the Dean of a finding of poor academic practice

Part 8 Miscellaneous

36 Nominees for Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Dean, Associate Dean and Registrar

37 Action where there may be a serious health issue

38 Multiple processes

39 Extension of time

40 Notices

___________________________________________________________________

Part 1              PRELIMINARY

1          Name of Rules and commencement

2          Application of these Rules

3          The academic integrity principle

4          Interpretation

academic integrity has the meaning given to it in rule 5;

academic misconduct has the meaning given to it in rule 6;

Act means the Australian National University Act 1991;

allegation of academic misconduct means a report made in accordance with subrule 13.2 or a written record made under subrule 13.3;

alleged academic misconduct means alleged academic misconduct referred to in subrule 13.1;

Appeals Committee means an Appeals Committee established under the Appeals Rules ;

assessable work means the output of a task which is required to be performed by a student for assessment;

assessment includes a task that is required to be performed by a student for a judgment to be made of the student's level of performance in relation to a program or course, including:

Examples:

(i) use of prohibited material or equipment for unfair advantage;

(ii) consultation with other persons during the course of the assessment where this is prohibited.

college means an ANU College;

collusion has the meaning given to it in rule 8;

course means a subject of scholarly study taught:

(a) in a connected series of classes or demonstrations; or

(b) by means of practical work, including the production by students of essays or theses of case studies or the attendance and participation by students in seminars or workshops;

course convenor means the person in charge of a course (and for the ANU Medical School, means the Deputy Dean of the Medical School in the College of Medicine, Biology and Environment);

Dean, in relation to a student, means the Dean of the college responsible for the program in which the student is or was enrolled or is or was seeking enrolment;

Deputy Vice-Chancellor in relation to a matter, means the person who holds office as a Deputy Vice-Chancellor who has portfolio responsibility for the matter, including a nominee of the Deputy Vice-Chancellor appointed in accordance with rule 36;

examination venue means a place at which students are required to attend for the purpose of assessment under controlled conditions;

fabrication means the representation of data, observation or other research activity as genuine, comprehensive or original when it is not. This includes inventing the data, using data gathered by other researchers without acknowledgment, falsifying data or wilfully omitting data to obtain desired results;

initial review means review under Part 5 of these Rules;

inquiry process means the process of investigating a report of academic misconduct, including any appeal from a decision;

inquiry officer means a person who conducts an inquiry under Part 6;

invigilator means any person, including a member of the academic or general staff of the University, who is employed by or acting on behalf of the University to attend examinations and/or supervise students who are undertaking examinations conducted by or on behalf of the University (including examinations conducted by other national or international educational institutions);

member of ANU means a person who is a member of staff, a student or an invigilator;

original work means work that is genuinely produced by a student specifically for the particular assessment task for which it is submitted;

poor academic practice has the meaning given to it in rule 9;

plagiarism has the has the meaning given to it in rule 7;

Registrar includes a nominee of the Registrar appointed under rule 36;

research misconduct includes:

(a) fabrication of data;

(b) plagiarism;

(c) other conduct that:

(i) improperly appropriates the intellectual property or contributions of others;

(ii) intentionally impedes the progress of research; or

(iii) risks corrupting the research record or compromising the integrity of research practices;

review officer means a person who conducts an initial review under Part 5;

serious research misconduct means research misconduct where:

(a) there is recurrence or continuation of conduct that has previously been found to be research misconduct by the student;

(b) there is failure to follow research protocols approved by research ethics committees or statutory licence conditions, where that failure has resulted in  harm, or unreasonable risk of harm, to humans, animals or the environment;

(c) there is deliberate publishing of false research results that become part of the public record;

(d) serious harm to the University, or to other students, staff or visitors occurs as a result of reckless and wilful disregard for the consequences of the conduct;

student means a person who is or was enrolled in, or seeking enrolment in, a program or a course offered by the University, or who is or was given permission by the University to audit a program or course offered by the University;

supervisor means a person:

(a) appointed to supervise the candidature of a research student under the Research Awards Rules; or

(b) appointed to supervise a student’s thesis or research project for coursework students;

Vice Chancellor includes a nominee of the Vice-Chancellor appointed under rule 36;

work includes written, oral, numerical, audio, visual or other material that is submitted for assessment;

working day means a day other than a weekend, public holiday or University holiday.

Part 2              Student Academic Conduct

5          The academic integrity principle

6          Academic misconduct

7          Plagiarism

8          Collusion

9          Poor academic practice

Part 3              interim action

10       Interim exclusion by the Deputy Vice-Chancellor

11      Exclusion of student from attendance at an examination venue

12      Enrolment not terminated by interim action

Part 4              Report of academic misconduct

13      Alleged academic misconduct

14      Reference of alleged academic misconduct to the Registrar

Part 5              Initial Review

15      Allegations of academic misconduct to be reviewed

16      Power of Registrar to initiate inquiry without initial review

17      Decision by review officer to terminate the process

18      Notification of initial review

19      Meeting with the review officer

20      Decision by the review officer

21      Action to be taken if poor academic practice is found

Part 6              Inquiry

22      Registrar to refer matter to an inquiry officer

23      Decision by the inquiry officer not to conduct an inquiry

24      Options available to the inquiry officer

25      Transfer by an inquiry officer

26      Meeting with the student

27      Notice of inquiry by inquiry officer

28      Procedure at an inquiry

29      Student’s rights at an inquiry

30      Decision by the inquiry officer

31      Penalty for academic misconduct

32      Student undertakings

33      Re-enrolment following suspension

Part 7              Appeals and Review

34      Review by the Appeals Committee

Note:  The Appeals Rules, , provide that a person who is affected by a reviewable decision may, within specified time limits, apply for review of that decision.

35      Review by the Dean of a finding of poor academic practice

Part 8              Miscellaneous

36      Nominees for Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Dean, Associate Dean and Registrar

37      Action where there may be a serious health issue

38      Multiple processes

39      Extension of time

40      Notices