· Schedule of Experiments for each week.
PHY251 Laboratory will start on Monday, January 23, 2006
Academic
Integrity:
The principles of truth and honesty are recognized as fundamental to a
community of teachers and scholars. The University expects that both faculty
and students will honor these principles and in so doing protect the validity
of University grades. This means that all academic work will be done by the
student to whom it is assigned, without unauthorized aid of any kind. (See
General Student Regulation 1.00, Scholarship and Grades, for specific
regulations.) Instructors, for their part, will exercise care in the planning
and supervision of academic work, so that honest effort will be positively
encouraged. If any instance of academic dishonesty is discovered by an
instructor, it is his or her responsibility to take appropriate action
Depending on his or her judgment of the particular case, he or she may give a
failing grade to the student on the assignment or for the course. In instances
where a failing grade in a course is given only for academic dishonesty, the
instructor will notify the student's academic dean in writing of the
circumstances. The student who receives a failing grade based on a charge of
academic dishonesty may appeal a judgment made by a department, school, or a
college to the University Academic Integrity Review Board. Refer to Academic
Freedom for Students at
Last updated January 4, 2006