Credit your Sources
The section "Credit your Sources" answers the following questions:
What is plagiarism? What types of things must be credited?
Why is it important to credit your sources?
How to keep track of your sources and how to cite your sources Click on the Credit button to learn more.
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Collaborate with Others
Collaboration means working together or receiving assistance from someone, whether a peer, classmate, faculty member, friend or family member, to complete course work for a grade.
This section addresses authorized and unauthorized collaboration, Intellectual Property, and Patents. Click on the Collaborate button to learn more.
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Act with Honesty
Cheating, fabrication and falsification are types of academic misconduct.
This section describes various forms of dishonest behaviour and outlines the penalties associated with these actions. Click on the Honesty button to learn more.
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Policies
Click on the Policies button to learn about the University of Waterloo policies relating to academic integrity.
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Resources
Click on the Resources button for additional help with your questions about academic integrity.
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Your Feedback
Click on the Feedback button to tell us what you think of this website.
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Academic integrity is a shared responsibility of all members of the University of Waterloo community. This website is one component of a larger academic integrity program that strives to ensure that you fully understand the values and behaviours of a responsible UW graduate student.
The graduate student experience varies by discipline. Academic integrity programs in each faculty support discipline-specific issues. This module addresses the general issues.
You may also wish to review the Orientation to Academic Integrity for First Year Students, for foundational information.