I know UVA makes a Very Big (and Pooh-Cased) Deal out of theirs in the same way a lot of smaller schools do -- part of the school's identity and tradition and the Jefferson thing yadda yadda -- but not having gone there, I can't say much about how it actually plays.
I can, I went there. I appreciated the Honor Code, and still remember it "on my honor, I have neither given nor received aid on this exam". Technically, you were also supposed to report any knowledge of someone else cheating. It is student run, and if a professor has an allegation of cheating, they must report it to the student run Honor Committee, and the Committee takes it from there.
it was a nice thing in college. I didn't have to take tests in a cramped lecture hall with 300 mouth breathers, I could go take the test under a tree on the lawn if I wanted. I literally got a final that was a folder over piece of paper that was stapled shut. the professor said "take it whenever you want to, it's closed book, take 3 hours, and make sure that it's in my mailbox by 5PM on the 15th" It was nice, the trust. It was a shock when I went to law school and was required to put my backpack against the wall before I took an exam.
There was actually a hyooge scandal a few years ago, where a physics professor did a comparison of papers for a "how things work" class, and about 100 people got busted. The committee investigated and prosecuted all of the offenses, and some people did not graduate. UVA's honor code is single sanction -- if you're guilty, you're out.
Anyone know what the font name for the typical college shirt, a la this [link] is?
brenda, I've seen it called "college"
Opponents object to primary enforcement on the grounds that it is too much government intrusion into our lives, and that drivers should be allowed to make their own decisions about wearing seat belts.
That's always the argument I heard when Wisconsin was considering such a law. The same argument is made against mandatory motorcycle helmet laws.
Which when you think about it is weird, as an unbelted driver of a car is still gonna be far safer than a helmeted person riding a motorcycle, so why not ban motorcycles? Or convertibles, as you could fly out of one in an accident or get crushed if it rolls over?
If the law is on the books, the decision's being taken out of a driver's hands. Just because you can't get busted for
just
that infraction doesn't make it not an infraction. Laws that don't get enforced (or are irregularly enforced) annoy me. Tidy up the freaking books, willya?
My school:
The Vanderbilt Honor System was instituted in 1875 with the first final examinations administered by the University. Dean Madison Sarratt summarized the system as follows: "Let every individual who contemplates entering Vanderbilt University ask himself first this important question: Am I strong enough to give my word of honor and then live up to it in spite of every temptation that may arise? If you can answer this question in the affirmative, Vanderbilt University will welcome you and will promise the cooperation of every person here in helping you realize this ideal of integrity implied in your answer."
A student's personal integrity then, as now, was presumed to be sufficient assurance that in academic matters one did one's own work without unauthorized help from any other source.
Seat belts aren't only for the protection of the person wearing them. In the case of the driver, they keep the driver behind the wheel, giving him a better chance of steering the car.
I have skipped and skimmed like one of those little birds that flies an inch or two above the water, occasionally dipping down to scarf up and insect. I think that this is a real creature and not just an image my brain made up. Anyway, it appears that you have all been going on having lives and crises and triumphs while I was wrapped up in my own drama and not paying attention. Brackets and congratulations and compliments as they should be apportioned over the last, I-don't-even-know-how-long-it's-been.
My folks just got high-speed internet service, so i will most likely be around quite a bit more often. My goal for today is to not spend all day catching up on my internet addictions diversions, but achieve some progress in decreasing the entropy of my immediate environment. Achievable, but a challenge. A good goal.
Ooh, I can be on topic. My school had a very serious honor code that we discussed all the time among ourselves - what it covered, how best to handle violations, etc etc. We had non-proctored exams, collaborative homework, and take-home closed book timed exams. We were treated as adults. If anyone violated that code, the whole system wouldn't have worked, and damn straight that person would have been turned in if I knew about it. It appears (from what I have learned from reading alumni bulletins and suchlike) that the code has been watered down and there is more supervision of today's students. This makes me (a) very sad and (b) less likely to ever donate to my school. Also, going to grad schools in environments that did not have such honor codes was very weird to me - all the proctoring and different copies of the same exam distributed to the class to prevent cheating all made me feel like I was back in high school and that the whole experience of school was to be taken less seriously than when I was an undergrad.
Brenda, click here for a sample of the college font (free download if you need it ) [link]
the professor said "take it whenever you want to, it's closed book, take 3 hours, and make sure that it's in my mailbox by 5PM on the 15th"
Huh. Okay, maybe if all the tests were like that. It's just, most take-home tests I've ever taken were sort of explicitly open-book.