Academic Integrity

This page summarizes VIU’s Academic Integrity Policy 96.01 and Procedure 96.01.001 as well as gives faculty some guidance and best practices for navigating issues around academic integrity. 

For extra details, including the Academic Integrity Inquiry Form, please review the full formal process in Procedure 96.01.001.

  1. You have reason to believe that academic misconduct has occurred. 
  2. After receiving information from the student, you continue to believe academic misconduct has occurred. 
  3. The Dean’s office will separate your submission and send Part C to the Student to complete.
  4. If Academic Misconduct has been determined to occur, a request to Records will be made to confirm if this is a first or repeat offence. 
  • Contact the student (see Best Practices) and arrange to speak further – either in-person, over zoom, or through email exchange – to find out more information.
  • Complete the Academic Misconduct Inquiry Form (Parts A and B) at the end of Procedure 96.01.001. Sign and submit the form to the Dean’s office.
  • The Dean reviews all completed parts of the Academic Misconduct Inquiry form (A, B,C) and decides if Academic Misconduct has occurred. If a decision is that it has not occurred, this will be communicated to you and the student.
  • The Dean completes all paperwork and submits a final decision (by letter) to student that outlines the disciplinary actions and/or corrective measures that will occur and will notify you about any disciplinary actions (e.g. F on assignment or F in course) that you need to apply.

Best Practices

Updating Course Outlines to Incorporate the Rise of Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI)

For many of us, our assignments and assessment plans were built prior to the rise of mainstream Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI) /Large Language Models (LLM), such as ChatGPT. Since early 2023, a lot has been written on how disruptive this technology will be to some educational assessment methods, particularly those that involve out-of-class writing (google “generative artificial intelligence educational assessment” for more information).

While the unpermitted use of GenAI to complete an assessment is captured as “cheating” under VIU’s current Academic Integrity policy language, there may be assessments, courses, or programs at VIU that want to engage in using GenAI and incorporate these technological tools into their curriculum. Therefore, it is important that faculty, at a minimum, provide clarity to students on if GenAI can, or cannot be, used for a course and for any given assessment. You may also want to consider engaging your students in a discussion on what GenAI tools do well, and what they do not do well, in relation to your discipline (side note, this would be great topic for a department meeting).

The most direct way to communicate your stance on GenAI is to include a statement on GenAI in your Course Outline as an additional course level policy, and then discuss it on the first day of class. 

Example language, taken from the University of Toronto document U of T Syllabus Language – Use of Generative AI in Assignments1, are as follows:

GenAI Use Permitted Examples for Course Outlines:

  • “Students may use artificial intelligence tools, including generative AI, in this course as learning aids or to help produce assignments. However, students are ultimately accountable for the work they submit.”
  • “Any content produced by an artificial intelligence tool must be cited appropriately. Many organizations that publish standard citations formats are now providing information on citing generative AI (e.g., MLA https://style.mla.org/citing-generative-ai/)
  • “Students may choose to use generative artificial intelligence tools as they work through the assignments in this course; this use must be documented in an appendix for each assignment. The documentation should include what tool(s) were used, how they were used, and how the results from the AI were incorporated into the submitted work.”

If you are wanting to encourage, or require, the use of a GenAI, please consider whether a subscription fee is required and potential privacy concerns (google “privacy and generative ai”).

GenAI Use “Sometimes” Permitted Examples for Course Outlines:

  • “Students may use artificial intelligence tools for creating an outline for an assignment, but the final submitted assignment must be original work produced by the individual student alone.”

GenAI Use NOT Permitted Examples for Course Outlines:

As GenAI tools become incorporated into permitted tools (example: Google Docs), these statements may need revisions to become more specific on new GenAI features.

  • “The use of generative artificial intelligence tools or apps for assignments in this course, including tools like ChatGPT and other AI writing or coding assistants, is prohibited.”
  • “The use of generative artificial intelligence tools and apps is strictly prohibited in all course assignments unless explicitly stated otherwise by the instructor in this course. This includes ChatGPT and other AI writing and coding assistants. Use of generative AI in this course may be considered use of an unauthorized aid, which is a form of cheating.”

In addition, if using GenAI is not permitted on an assessment, this should be reiterated in the assessment instructions. As policing the use of GenAI is incredibly difficult and complex, and acknowledging that the policing of academic integrity is everyone’s least favourite professional obligation, it is strongly encouraged that faculty discuss with their peers, in their faculty and across the sector, on how to adapt assessments so they are less amenable to being completed by GenAI (google “generative artificial intelligence educational assessment” for some online materials and connect with CIEL at VIU for additional information).

Source: https://www.viceprovostundergrad.utoronto.ca/strategic-priorities/digital-learning/special-initiative-artificial-intelligence/

If you suspect a student has committed Academic Misconduct (even when that suspicion is backed-up by iron-clad evidence), a conversation with the student is a critical first step. Under the principles of Procedural Fairness, it is important that the student has an opportunity to provide an explanation for the issue. Even with solid evidence, the intent here is that there are some scenarios where the student’s explanation could resolve the issue and you may either decide to drop the formal process all together (as no Academic Misconduct occurred) or the student’s explanation could point to the issue being ‘poor academic practice’, in which case the issue should be resolved by the marking scheme at the course level. 

When setting up a meeting with a student, there are a few best practices that are strongly encouraged.

  • Be clear in your meeting request about the reason for the meeting. A student should know that they are coming to a meeting to discuss a suspicious aspects of their work; that you have questions on how they completed a task; or that you want to know more about how they came up with an answer. They should not enter into a meeting blind to the purpose.
  • Inform the student in the meeting request that you will be taking notes which may be used as required by the Academic Misconduct Inquiry Form, and that they should also take notes in case they have follow-up questions.
  • Let the student know that when meeting, they are welcome to have someone else attend with them if they would like. Their student union (independent of VIU) employs a Student Advocate who can help students navigate VIU processes and they are free to reach out to them. Contact, and more information, can be found at https://www.viusu.ca/advocate.
  • Note that you are also able to ask your Department Chair, or in some cases, the Dean, to attend the meeting with you. If you are going to do so, it is best that the student be made aware of who they are meeting with.
  • Acknowledge that receiving a meeting request such as this is stressful and that the purpose of the meeting is to bring clarity to the issue and that you are approaching it with an open-mind. Remind them that counselling services are available to all VIU students and they should reach out if they need help. https://services.viu.ca/counselling/

For you, the goals of the meeting are to hear the student out; to ask some probing questions that can bring clarity to the matter; and to document/summarize the student’s explanation for the Academic Misconduct Inquiry Form (if you elect to continue with the formal process).

  • You should not accuse the student of cheating/plagiarism/etc. (even with iron-clad evidence; you want to avoid justifying, arguing, defending, or explaining how you are feeling about the matter).
  • You should be prepared to share your evidence with the student and to give the student time to respond to your questions and explain the situation from their perspective. You should take notes.
  • You do not need to get the student to confess and confessions should not be incentivized. This means that if a student does not admit to the misconduct, the punishment you recommend on the Academic Misconduct Inquire Form should not be enhanced.
  • Example of probing questions (complied by Ryerson Academic Integrity Office):
    • Questions of content to see if the student knows the material;
    • How did they do their work;
    • What they learned from doing their work;
    • If anyone had influenced their work or assisted them in completing their work;
    • Ask the student to explain the circumstances that have led to your suspicion;
  • Give the student time to also ask any questions that they may have.
  • To wrap-up the meeting, thank the student for their time and acknowledge that meetings like this are stressful. Let them know that you may follow up if you have further questions.
  • You do not need to make your decision in the moment. Tell the student that you will reflect on what has been shared in this meeting and either you or the Dean’s office will be in contact regarding any decision. [You will only be in contact with them if you decide that the matter has been resolved as a misunderstanding or is poor academic practice; the Dean’s office will be in contact if you decided to complete the Academic Misconduct Inquiry Form]
  • If you decide to continue with the Academic Misconduct Inquiry Form, you should complete the Part A, section 2 (Brief account of conference(s) with the student regarding the incident) while the experience is fresh.

In the end, the ultimate decision on whether misconduct has occurred falls to the Dean, and “a balance of probabilities” approach is used. The choice on the disciplinary action is determined by whether this is a first or subsequent Record for the student, the severity of the misconduct, and also by looking at how Records have been handled across the Faculty in order to ensure a level of fairness.

Definitions

“Procedural fairness” is the principle whereby the student has the right to a fair process including:

  • to the full facts of the case;
  • the right to have matters addressed fairly and expeditiously;
  • the right to be heard;
  • to receive an impartial and unbiased decision; and
  • to be provided with a rationale for that decision.

In addition, students have a right to have a support person and/or an advocate present during all stages of proceedings. (Procedure 96.01.001)

Depending on a student’s K-12 experiences, they may be attending VIU with gaps in their understanding of Academic Integrity. It is important that programs address this topic in first-year courses and throughout their core curriculum in a manner specific to their discipline. 

“Poor academic practice” can be described as minor errors made through carelessness or inexperience rather than through an intention to deceive. Poor academic practice may include, but is not limited to, minor technical errors in referencing or a reasonable lack of understanding of academic integrity expectations. (Procedure 96.01.001)

Poor academic practice issues should be dealt with in any marking scheme in a proportional manner and does not require any formal follow-up. It is also worth noting that what is reasonable in terms of a lack of understanding on the part of the student will change based on the standing of the student (first year, second year, third year, etc.).