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Academic Staff Handbook |
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Chapter 5 Research and Teaching |
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POLICIES ON ACADEMIC INTEGRITY The University of Illinois is
dedicated to learning and research and hence is committed to truth and
accuracy. Integrity and intellectual honesty in scholarship and scientific
investigation are, therefore, of paramount importance. It is the
responsibility of the faculty and staff to maintain high ethical standards of
professional integrity. Responsible Professional
Conduct: Guidelines for Teaching, Research, and Service The Faculty Senate has endorsed
the following set of guidelines for the campus. Members of the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign campus community are expected to adhere to the
highest standards of professional conduct in carrying out their teaching,
research, service, and other professional responsibilities. Such conduct is
subject to norms and ethical codes that vary somewhat among disciplines, as
well as to differing individual perceptions and interpretations; but certain
general ethical guidelines reflecting the commitment of the campus to these
standards are applicable to all faculty, staff and graduate assistants on the
Urbana-Champaign campus. Some types of conduct,
expressly forbidden by University rules and regulations (see, e.g., University
of Illinois Policy and Procedures on Academic Integrity in Research and
Publication, Policy and Procedures for Addressing Discrimination and
Harassment, and University of Illinois Policy on Conflicts of Interest
and Commitment), may have severe consequences. Others, not formally
proscribed, are nonetheless properly included among the matters to which
campus standards of professional conduct apply. Some are addressed in the
formalized codes of ethics some disciplines have adopted or are reflected in
prevailing practices in various disciplines. Where the University's standards
surpass such other norms, it is the University's standards to which members
of the campus community are expected to adhere. The following guidelines relate
to activities involved in fulfilling instructional responsibilities, in
acquiring and using data in the course of conducting research, in authoring
scholarly publications, and in interacting professionally with other
individuals on this campus and elsewhere. No set of guidelines can cover all
of the kinds of cases to which professional ethical considerations apply. Moreover,
the interpretation of specific guidelines in actual situations may be
uncertain, and the assessment of complex situations to which a number of
different standards and other important considerations apply may be
difficult. Those who find themselves faced with such further problems in
these areas of academic life should seek the advice and counsel of campus and
professional colleagues and appropriate administrators who may be able to
offer advice or suggest actions to mitigate the problem. |
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Instructional
Responsibilities: Members of academic units have
a fundamental obligation to respect the dignity of all students and to foster
their intellectual growth and development. a. Faculty members should
explain at the beginning of each course the grading criteria to be used and
the requirements for successful completion of the coursework. Such criteria
and requirements should be clear and should be applied consistently and
fairly. b. Faculty members should
ensure that students are provided feedback and guidance to facilitate their
academic progress. c. Faculty members should
acknowledge sources of and observe copyright for materials prepared for
course distribution. d. In any student-faculty
collaboration, the intellectual contributions of the student should be fully
and appropriately acknowledged. Handling of Data: Individuals conducting research
are obligated to record and preserve data in a manner that accurately
reflects the work done, and that allows appropriate scrutiny and evaluation
of those data. a. Falsification of data,
fabrication of data, and unacknowledged appropriation of the data of others
are unethical; they are also violations of the University's academic
integrity policy. b. Data (including source
materials) should be retained for an appropriate length of time after
publication so that they are available for inspection by collaborators or,
when appropriate, by other qualified individuals. c. Data should never be
withheld from collaborators except for purposes integral to the project. d. Individuals conducting
research should consider carefully all results, including those that do not
fit research expectations. Authorship, Attribution of
Credit, and Other Publication Practices: Authors should conform to
formally promulgated and/or generally observed standards and practices for
authorship and attribution of credit in their disciplines. a. Plagiarism is unethical and
is a violation of the University's academic integrity policy. b. Authorship should be
accorded to those who contribute both actively and meaningfully to a study. c. Authors (including
co-authors) have responsibility for their publications and should respond in
an appropriate forum to legitimate inquiries about their data, methods, or
interpretations. d. Authors should adhere to the
standards and requirements of journals to which they submit manuscripts,
particularly with respect to simultaneous submissions and originality of
research. e. Authors should acknowledge
funding sources that support their research. f. Authors should publish only
those findings that result from careful consideration of the materials under
study and, when appropriate, replication or verification of the study. g. Authors should present in
publications of experimental research sufficient information about
methodology to permit others to repeat or extend the work. Professional Conduct: Members of the University
community must honor contractual obligations in teaching, research, public
service, and other professional responsibilities. They |
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should further conduct
themselves in a professional and collegial manner in all dealings with each
other. a. Members of academic units
should provide an environment for professional development of all staff. b. Individuals assessing the
work of others should base their assessments on appropriate professional
criteria. Due to the inherent conflicts of interest, no individual should
initiate or participate in institutional or educational decisions involving a
direct benefit or penalty to a person with whom that individual has or has
had a sexual relationship. c. Members of academic units
should seek collegial resolution of professional disputes. d. Individuals engaged in teaching,
research, or public service should respect and abide by legitimate and
reasonable requests for confidentiality. e. Individuals conducting
research have an obligation to follow procedures that assure the ethical
treatment of human subjects and animals, as well as applicable regulations. f. Individuals engaged in
research and teaching should understand and comply with pertinent regulations
for health and safety in the workplace; should see to it that students and
collaborators in learning or research projects understand and comply with
these regulations; and should work to minimize risks to health and safety in
the learning or research environment. g. Individuals conducting
research should spend research monies in ways consistent with the goals
stated in contract documents. h. Individuals conducting
research and/or the officials of their administrative units have an
obligation to keep clear records of expenditures and to make these records
available to appropriate parties. Academic Misconduct In addition to the Responsible
Conduct guidelines, the University of Illinois Policy and Procedures
on Academic Integrity in Research and Publication (www.research.
uiuc.edu/ai/index.asp) sets forth University-wide procedures for addressing
particular instances of unethical conduct in research and publication. According to the Policy and
Procedures, any of the following constitutes academic misconduct: 1. Fabrication or falsification
of data, including intentionally misleading, selective, or deliberately false
reporting of credentials or other academically related information; 2. Unacknowledged appropriation
of the work of others, including plagiarism, the abuse of confidentiality
with respect to unpublished materials, or misappropriation of physical
materials; 3. Evasion of, or intentional
failure after notice by the University of Illinois federal, state, or other
appropriate agency to comply with, research regulations or requirements,
includingbut not limited tothose applying to human subjects, laboratory
animals, new drugs, radioactive materials, genetically altered organisms, and
safety; and 4. Other conduct that seriously
deviates from accepted ethical standards in scholarship. Differences of interpretation
or judgment, or honest error, do not constitute academic misconduct. |
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Procedures in Cases of
Suspected Misconduct If the person whose conduct is
in question is an undergraduate student, the matter should proceed according
to the Code on Campus Affairs. If the person is a graduate student, it
should be handled according to the Bylaws of the Graduate College,
which parallels much of the Policy and Procedures. Otherwise, any
member of the University community who becomes aware of an apparent instance
of academic misconduct relating to research or scholarship is obligated to
report the incident or practice to the executive officer (e.g., head of the
department or comparable administrator) of the unit concerned or to the
campus research standards officer. The research standards officer, unit
executive officers, deans, and everyone else involved are charged with
protecting the academic reputation and position of anyone who in good faith
reports misconduct in scholarship or research. If the charges are not clearly
frivolous or mistaken, the unit executive officer, with the assistance of the
research standards officer, promptly brings them to the attention of the dean
or comparable administrator (referred to as "dean") to whom the
executive reports. The dean, in consultation with the research standards
officer and unit executive officer, determines whether there is sufficient
evidence of academic misconduct to warrant an inquiry. If so, the dean
appoints an inquiry team to conduct a preliminary review as expeditiously as
possible. The purpose of an inquiry is to determine whether there is
sufficient evidence of academic misconduct to warrant a full-scale
investigation. The person whose conduct is in question (the respondent)
receives prompt written notice of the appointment of the inquiry team and the
nature of the allegations. After receiving the report from
the inquiry team, the vice chancellor for research decidesin consultation
with the dean, the unit executive officer, the inquiry team, and the research
standards officerwhether the matter should be dropped or a full investigation
should be conducted. If the decision is made not to pursue the case further,
the research standards officer ensures that all reference to the matter is
expunged from the respondent's personnel file. The respondent, the initiator,
and anyone informed of the charge are notified in writing of the decision. If there is sufficient evidence
of academic misconduct to warrant a full-scale investigation, the vice
chancellor for research appoints a panel of three competent scholars to
investigate the matter thoroughly. The respondent is informed in writing of
the composition of the panel and the subject matter of the investigation. The
investigation panel prepares a report containing findings of fact with
respect to each allegation and listing the evidence relevant to each finding.
Before making its report, the panel offers the respondent the opportunity to
meet with the panel to discuss the case. The respondent may be accompanied by
"private legal counsel or another adviser of choice at the meeting with
the panel, for the purpose of providing advice to the respondent." (See
section IV.E.5.d. of the Policy and Procedures.) The panel makes its report to
the vice chancellor for research and transmits a copy to the respondent. The
respondent may comment on the report, in writing, to the vice chancellor for
research. The vice chancellor transmits the reports and respondent's comments
to the chancellor, who decides on a disposition of the case in consultation
with the dean, the vice chancellor for research, and the provost. If the chancellor concludes
that the allegations have not been proven, all written records are sealed,
and everyone involved in the case is notified in writing of the disposition. |
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If the chancellor concurs with
the investigation panel's findings of misconduct, the chancellor proceeds in
accordance with the University Statutes and relevant university rules and
regulations. All stages of the investigation
up to this time are treated as entirely confidential. For a complete statement of the
policy on academic integrity or for information concerning its
interpretation, contact the research standards officer in the Office of the
Vice Chancellor for Research (333-5158). A copy of the policy is also located
on the Web at www.research.uiuc.edu/ai/index.asp. VICE CHANCELLOR FOR RESEARCH The Office of the Vice
Chancellor for Research (OVCR) has policymaking and oversight responsibility
for the research mission of the Urbana-Champaign campus. Total research
expenditures for UIUC in FY00 exceeded $260 million through more than 3000
sponsored research awards from the federal and state governments and private
organizations. A number of interdisciplinary
research and research support units report to the OVCR. These include the
Biomedical Magnetic Resonance Facility, the Biotechnology Center, the Center
for Advanced Study, the Committee on Natural Areas, the Division of Animal
Resources, the National Center for Supercomputing Applications, the Office of
Technology Management, the Program on Ancient Technologies and Archaeological
Materials, the Sea Grant Program, the Technology Commercialization Laboratory,
and the UIUC Research Park, LLC. The State surveysState Geological Survey,
Illinois Natural History Survey, State Water Survey and the Waste Management
and Research Center are also associated with the OVCR. The OVCR administers several
programs that fund research at UIUC. These include the Research Board, the
Scholars Travel Fund, and the Critical Research Initiatives Program. The OVCR is home to the UIUC
Institutional Review Board, which is responsible for overseeing all research
involving human subjects on the UIUC campus. The OVCR also administers the
annual Report of Non-University Activities, which provides a mechanism for
oversight of conflicts of commitment and interest for UIUC academic staff, in
accordance with the Policy on Conflicts of Commitment and Interest. The
Research Standards Officer is appointed by the VCR and is responsible for
observance of the Policy and Procedures on Academic Integrity in Research
and Publication. Within the OVCR, intellectual
property, technology transfer and academic research policy issues are handled
by the Office of Research Administration (ORA) and the Office of Technology
Management (OTM). The principal responsibilities
of the ORA are to provide leadership and assistance to the UIUC research
community, the Grants and Contracts Office, and corporate and Government
sponsors related to drafting, reviewing, negotiating and implementing a wide
range of research agreements to facilitate Campus research initiatives. The
ORA reviews research agreements for compliance with applicable University
intellectual property and academic research policies and practices, as well
as consistency with applicable state and federal regulations. The activities
of the ORA require close collaboration with the OTM on intellectual property
and licensing issues in research agreements, to insure that interactions with
industry regarding sponsored research will be consistent with the
University's technology transfer objectives. |
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The OTM is a service unit
focused on management of intellectual property arising from the research
activities on the Urbana-Champaign campus. The OTM provides leadership and
assistance to the UIUC research community, corporate and government agencies
on intellectual property matters. The principal responsibilities of the OTM
are valuing, protecting, marketing and licensing UIUC intellectual property
and overseeing compliance issues associated with technology transfer. The OTM
is also responsible for formulating, implementing and overseeing intellectual
property policies and practices that encourage the discovery and development
of new knowledge and its transfer for the public benefit. In order to encourage collaborative
efforts between University researchers and industry, the University of
Illinois has constructed a Research Park in Urbana-Champaign. The UIUC
Research Park, LLC reports to the University through the VCR. The mission of
the Research Park is to encourage research, development and commercialization
of the University's intellectual assets, and to foster economic growth. The Research Park and its
early-stage technology incubator program are expected to provide new synergy
for technology-based economic development in Illinois. In addition, the
incubator will provide our faculty and students with the opportunity to
benefit from the commercialization of their research, keeping the University
of Illinois competitive with other world-class research institutions for the
very best talent. The incubator can also be attractive to many established
technology firms as a source of new technologies complementary to their
primary markets. CAMPUS RESEARCH BOARD The University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign Research Board provides support for research in response to
applications submitted by members of the faculty or academic professional
staff. The board is composed of eight to twelve senior scholars appointed by
the chancellor for staggered four-year terms. Chaired by the dean of the
Graduate College, the board meets biweekly, with alternate meetings serving
as allocation sessions. Research Board grants help to
new faculty members who initiate their research on this campus, provide seed
money for research programs for which external support is available, support
pilot projects, provide modest resources for important research for which
external sources of support are not available, help provide matching funds sometimes
required by external sponsors, and respond to emergency requests as well as
requests to take advantage of unusual research opportunities. The magnitude and flexibility
of internal research support provided by the Research Board have made it a
significant asset for enhancing the scholarly distinction of the University.
Over the years, the board has also played a role in major research planning
and policy development. The board has additional functions, which include
reviewing sabbatical leave requests, reviewing of Packard Fellowship
nominations, and advising the vice-chancellor for research and the dean of
the Graduate College, at their request, on special problems. The Research Board has three
principal funding programs: Research Board awards, Scholar's Travel Fund
awards, and Humanities Release Time. |
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Research Board Awards During the past several years,
Research Board awards have been mainly in the form of research
assistantships, extraordinary supplies and other research expenses,
equipment, publication subventions, and travel to research sites. Other types
of awards are also eligible for consideration: for example, a special library
acquisition that might have important implications for a particular faculty
research effort, research initiation awards, various forms of travel support
for research activity, expenses associated with special performances and
exhibitions, or special forms of released time. The Humanities Release Time
Program provides release time to faculty in a restricted number of
departments to conduct specific research projects for which their own
concentrated effort is the resource most urgently needed. Research Board
funding is also provided to the Center for Advanced Study for release time
awarded through their Fellows and Associates program. Examples of support normally
not provided by the Research Board include faculty salaries, any full-time
appointments, postdoctoral appointments, construction or remodeling costs,
and equipment maintenance costs. Applications are reviewed by
all members of the Research Board. In-depth review is provided through a
subcommittee structure for five disciplinary areas and through the use of
peer reviews, drawn from campus faculty. Key factors in the decisions are
merit, impact, potential value to the stature of the University, value for
the development of the applicant's potential, quality and productivity of the
applicant, appropriateness of the budget, need, and availability of external
support. The deadlines for applications
are announced each year and are available on the Web. Normally, these
deadlines are set approximately one month before the allocation session.
Contact the Research Board Office for additional information (333-0037) or
visit the Web site www.research.uiuc.edu/crb/index.asp. Scholar's Travel Fund Limited funds have been set
aside by the Research Board for the Scholar's Travel Fund to support domestic
and foreign travel to learned societies for the presentation of papers and
for the performance or exhibition of creative work. The fund is generally
used to assist faculty members in the humanities, mathematics, fine and
applied arts, the Library, library science, and social sciences. (Funds for
foreign and domestic travel in order to gain access to research materials or
resources should be requested from the Research Board's awards program, not
from the Scholar's Travel Fund.) Decisions are influenced by the
merit of the applicant's scholarship, the nature of the applicant's
participation in the event, the importance of the event, and the value of
participation for the scholar and the Urbana-Champaign campus. Applications should be
submitted on the Scholar's Travel Fund form, available from the Research
Board, 417 Swanlund Administration Building. Application deadlines are
announced annually. For further information, call 3335158 or see the Web site
www.research.uiuc.edu/stf. Research Scholars Program Recognizing that in a
university community there is a large pool of academically trained and
talented persons who are members of dual-career couples, the Graduate
College, through the Research Board, has initiated a program of |
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appointments of academically
qualified persons as Research Scholars to permit them to continue research,
scholarship, and creative activities in an academic environment. The Research
Scholars Program is part of a campus effort to address the problems in
recruiting and retaining highly qualified faculty and professional staff
members due to limited local professional career opportunities for dual-career
couples. This campus-level approach supplements affiliations established by
departments, often with the assistance of the school, college, and campus
administration. Application materials and further information are available
from the Research Board (333-0037) or on the Web at
www.research.uiuc.edu/rsp. PROTECTION OF HUMAN SUBJECTS IN
RESEARCH The University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign affirms the need for academic freedom in the conduct of
research and the value of well-designed, responsible activities that involve
human subjects. At the same time, it recognizes its basic responsibility to
assure the protection of any human subjects so involved. To this end, it has
adopted a policy that applies to any research conducted at or sponsored by
the University involving human subjects, regardless of the source of funds
supporting the research. The policy applies to research involving living
individuals about whom an investigator (whether professional or student)
obtains (1) data through intervention or interaction with the individual; or
(2) identifiable private information. The policy is applicable whether the
research is undertaken on a large or small scale and regardless of funding.
Pilot projects, student dissertation projects, independent study projects,
and course projects must follow this policy if they involve human subjects in
research. For additional information,
copies of the Handbook for Investigators, or review forms, contact the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Institutional Review Board, 417
Swanlund Administration Building (333-2670). Copies of the Handbook, a
schedule of review dates, and forms are available on the Web at
www.irb.uiuc.edu. INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY Intellectual Property (IP) is a
term that encompasses all forms of creativity that are protected either under
statutes or by common law. It includes inventions, discoveries, know-how,
show-how, processes, unique materials, chemical and biological compounds,
copyrightable works, algorithms, software, original data, databases, and
other creative or artistic works. Statutes or legislation such as patents,
copyrights, trademarks, trade secrets, plant variety protection certificates,
data rights, mask works, and others protect the various forms of IP. IP is an
asset that could have great intellectual and/or monetary value to the
creators of the property, the University, and the State of Illinois. The
University is required by state and federal statutes and by virtually all
sponsored research agreements with industry, the federal government, the
state, and foundations to manage and protect the IP that results from the
University's research programs. |
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Summary of the University's
IP Policies The primary purpose of the
University's IP police is to provide the necessary protection and incentives
to encourage both the discovery and development of new knowledge and its
transfer for the public benefit. The secondary purpose is to enhance the generation
of revenue for the University and the creators. The University is guided by
the following objectives: · To optimize the environment
and incentives for research and for the creation of new knowledge at the
University; · To ensure that the
educational mission of the University is not compromised; · To bring technology into
practical use for the public benefit as quickly and effectively as possible;
and · To protect the interest of
the people of Illinois through a due recovery by the University of its investment
in research. In keeping with academic
tradition, unless subject to the following specific exceptions, authors
retain all rights to traditional academic copyrightable works, such as
lecture notes and textbooks, prepared at their initiative for classroom,
educational, or professional purposes. The exceptions to an author claiming
all rights to a copyrightable work are: (1) when the University has an
agreement with an external party that requires the University to hold or
transfer ownership or license rights to the work; (2) when the work is
created by an author as a specific requirement of employment or an assigned
University duty, (3) when the work is specifically commissioned in writing by
the University, or (4) when the work is also patentable. Traditional
copyrightable works developed with an unusual commitment or substantial use
of University resources over and above those usually and customarily provided
shall be owned by the authors; however, the University may retain a license
to the copyrightable work. The minimum terms of such license shall grant the
University a royalty-free, non-exclusive right to use the original work in
its internally administered programs of teaching, research, and public
service. The University owns all other
intellectual property (e.g., inventions, technology, software and other
copyrightable works) made by a University employee as a result of the
employee's duties, or through the use of University resources such as
facilities, equipment, funds or funds under the control of, or administered
by the University. Even though the University is the owner of such
intellectual property, inventors and creators share in the revenue received
from its commercialization as specified in the General Rules. Also,
for patentable inventions, inventors are always identified on the patent.
Consistent with the public service mission of the University's land-grant
heritage, the University encourages its faculty and staff to create
technology and to stay involved in the process of transferring University
technology for use by the public either through publication or commercial
licensing. The University follows a policy of licensing technology developed
by its faculty, staff, and students or with University resources to the
private sector as one avenue for assuring public access to it. The first step
in notifying the sponsor of the research or the University that IP has been
created is to disclose the technology to the Office of Technology Management.
There are two types of disclosure forms: (1) one for copyrightable
technology, and (2) for inventions and all other forms of IP. The disclosure
forms can be found at www.otm.uiuc. edu/Forms.html |
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IP Policy, Guidelines and
Additional Resources As a land-grant university,
public availability of its technology is a primary goal of the University of
Illinois. The Offices of Technology Management on each campus have the
responsibility to protect University IP as well as market and transfer the
technology for commercial development and product sales. The following guidelines and
information further explain the transfer of University technologies and are
available on the Research and Technology and Management's Office Web site
www.otm.uiuc.edu. · The General Rules
Concerning University Organization and Procedure Article III
Intellectual Property, September 3, 1998 · Guidelines for the Licensing
of University Technology November 24, 1998 · Interim Guidelines for
Licensing to University Employee Start-Up · Intellectual Property
Subcommittee's Report on Courseware Development and Distribution Revised
May 18, 1999 · Policy on withholding
graduate theses from publication to prevent premature disclosure of
potentially patentable subject matter. CENTER FOR ADVANCED STUDY The Center for Advanced Study
was established in 1959 and reports to the Office of the Vice Chancellor for
Research. The center is charged with promoting the highest levels of
cross-disciplinary scholarship and discourse. Center programs reach
throughout the campus and cross virtually every discipline. Programs
sponsored by the Center include: Release Time Appointments (Associates and
Fellows); Graduate and Undergraduate CAS John Bardeen Scholars;
interdisciplinary initiatives as part of its Resident Studies Program; a
public events series; visiting scholars and professors program. In its institutional structure
the Center revolves around a small core of permanent professors-now known as
the Center for Advanced Study Professors (CAS)-chosen from the faculty for
their outstanding scholarship. These appointments are among the highest forms
of campus recognition. Center Professors, in turn, select research or
creative proposals from the tenured and untenured faculty, who are designated
Associates and Fellows, respectively. With the CAS Professors, Associates and
Fellows form the core of the Center for Advanced Study community, meeting
monthly for informal lunches and scholarly presentations. Associates and
Fellows also participate in a yearly roundtable discussion of research
interests. Thus each year brings together the established and the innovative
in an ever-changing flux of ideas and disciplines. Honoring the lifetime
achievements of Center professor John Bardeen, the CAS John Bardeen Scholars
Program grants stipends to undergraduate and graduate students pursuing a
research topic, generally related to a current Center initiative. Year-long initiatives explore
topical themes from multiple, interdisciplinary perspectives as part of its
Resident Studies Program. Interdisciplinary activities may include focused
discussion sessions, a scholarly lecture series, or a weekend symposium.
Recent year-long initiatives included: Defining Values for Research and
Technology: The University's Changing Role; The New Biology: Issues and
Opportunities; The Ethnography of the University of Illinois. CAS Forums on
Critical Issues and CAS Dialogues offer more informal venues for topical
discussions. |
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The George A. Miller Programs
attract more than 6,000 people each year who attend the CAS/MillerComm public
lecture series. All MillerComm visitors interact with students and faculty in
venues beyond the formal lecture. An endowed series-Miller Visiting
Professors and Scholars-extends departmental resources, bringing to campus a
steady flow of provocative scholars and performing artists for public events
and small group meetings. GIFTS AND SPONSORED ACTIVITIES Gifts and sponsored activities
(such as grants and contracts) are solicited and/or accepted for purposes
which are consistent with and enhance the teaching, research, public service,
and economic development missions of the University. Gifts are contributions made to
the University for which the provider receives no direct benefit and requires
nothing in exchange beyond a general assurance that the intent of the
contribution will be honored. The University of Illinois Foundation (UIF)
exists for the purpose of assisting the University by providing fund raising
services and other assistance to attract private gift funds to support
University programs. Through an annually renewable service agreement with the
University, the UIF performs a variety of functions to solicit, receive,
record, and administer private gift funds. The UIF is the primary receiving
point for gifts made to the University. Donors should be instructed to direct
their gifts to the UIF. No gift funds may be accepted
under terms that require prohibited discrimination or are in conflict with
federal or state law or University policy. Sponsored Activities (Grants
and Contracts) are undertaken by the University with support provided by an
external entity that expects an outcome that either directly benefits the
provider or serves a public purpose. At a minimum, the provider requires the
University to report on how the funds were spent and/or what progress has
been made in accomplishing the goals of the activity. Sponsored activities
are controlled and directed by the University and are conducted within the
appropriate department(s) by members of the university staff. The
administrative coordination of such programs is under the Campus Research
Board, and financial services are provided by the Grants and Contracts
Office. Subject to the approvals
described below, faculty members or administrators (in the case of
non-instructional units) may submit proposals as Principal Investigators or
Project Directors (PI/PD's). Other personnel, including professors emeritus
(with zero-time appointments), may do so with the permission of the unit head
who must assure that should the individual become unavailable to complete the
work proposed, the unit will either accept responsibility for the completion
of the project or return funds as provided by sponsor policy or agreement.
New University employees whose appointments have not yet started can also
submit proposals through the University, with the permission of the unit
head. Before submission to sponsors
for consideration, all proposals must have approval from the following: Campus Department / Unit This approval confirms that the
project can be integrated with the department's/ unit's regular educational,
research, or service functions. The unit approves the proposed budget and
confirms its commitment to make unit personnel and facilities described in
the proposal available for the project should it be awarded, and to
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terms and conditions. The
department/unit is responsible for compliance issues such as: use of human
subjects or live vertebrate animals, chemical hazards, biological hazards,
patent considerations, consultant payments, potential conflicts of interest,
and copyright issues. These issues must be noted on the back of the Proposal
Transmittal Form. The department is also responsible for processing payments
to subawardees and following close-out procedures for projects. Schools and Colleges Schools and colleges may
stipulate that they are also to review and approve any proposal originating
in their units. The Grants and Contracts
Office This approval confirms that the
proposal budget has been constructed in conformance with university and
sponsor policy, that any proposed subawards are reflected properly, that the
usage of University facilities and demands upon University resources have been
approved, and that proposal administrative information/approvals conform to
University, State, and sponsor policies. The Campus Research Board After approval by the Campus
Department/Unit, School/College, and the Grants and Contracts Office, the
Chairperson of the Campus Research Board or designee considers the proposal
for final approval. This approval confirms
consideration has been given to those compliance items listed on the Proposal
Transmittal Form, including but not limited to policies for conflict of
interest and the use of human subjects and animals, and that the campus'
interest would be served by the proposed activity. Further, it confirms that
all commitments of resources by campus units other than the proposing unit
have been formally documented. A fully approved proposal
constitutes the formal offer of the University to carry out the project. The
institutional approvals are obtained by having the appropriate official
either provide a letter confirming approval, or by the signature affixed on
the Proposal Transmittal Form. All proposals for sponsored
activities, regardless of whether funds will be awarded to the University of
Illinois or the University of Illinois Foundation, must follow these proposal
approval guidelines. (Certain Foundation sponsors, by charter, can award only
to particular kinds of non-profit organizations, and are precluded from
making awards directly to the University. This is the only circumstance under
which a grant can be made to the Foundation.) Proposals involving such things
as construction, development of a new instructional program, international
activities, and multi-campus cooperation require additional approvals. For a
full description of proposal approval requirements, consult the Project
Policies, Procedures, and Guidelines (available at
www.oba.uiuc.edu/gcol)." Sponsored Project Policies, Procedures, and
Guidelines (available at www.oba.uiuc.edu/gcol). INSTRUCTIONAL AWARDS Every spring a special
recognition dinner is held to honor the winners of the campus-level awards,
as well as the winners of the various college and departmental teaching
awards. The campus-level awards include the Campus |
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Award for Innovation in
Undergraduate Instruction, the Campus Award for Excellence in Advising
Undergraduate Students, the Campus Award for Excellence in Graduate and
Professional Teaching, the Campus Award for Excellence in Off-Campus
Teaching, the Campus Award for Excellence in Guiding Undergraduate Research,
the Campus Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching, and the Campus
Award for Innovation in Undergraduate Instruction Using Educational Technologies.
These awards are described briefly below. Further information about all of
these awards may be obtained from departmental offices or from the Office of
the Provost and Vice-Chancellor for Academic Affairs (265-0451), or may be
found on the awards home page
(www.provost.uiuc.edu/departments/awards/inst.html). Campus Award for Excellence
in Undergraduate Teaching These are the principal campus
awards for excellence in undergraduate teaching. Up to thirteen winners will
be chosen (five members of the faculty, five graduate teaching assistants,
and three members of the instructional staff). Faculty members who are
selected will receive $5,000 in cash for their personal use; instructional
staff will receive $4,000; and graduate teaching assistants will receive
$3,500. Recurring increments of $3,000 will be added to the annual salaries
of faculty members, $1,500 will be added to the salaries of instructional
staff members, and increments of $1,000 will be added to the stipends of the
graduate assistants who are returning to the campus the following year. Campus Award for Excellence
in Graduate and Professional Teaching Faculty members from academic
units with professional and/or graduate instructional programs are eligible
for the Campus Award for Excellence in Graduate and Professional Teaching.
The award consists of $5,000 in cash for the personal use of the faculty
member selected, and a recurring salary increment of $3,000. Up to two
winners will be selected to receive this award. Campus Award for Excellence
in Off-Campus Teaching Faculty members who teach as
part of the Academic Outreach credit program are eligible for this award,
which consists of $4,000 for personal use and $1,000 provided to the faculty
member's department to be used at his/her discretion for improving off-campus
instruction and program development. Campus Award for Innovation
in Undergraduate Instruction The Campus Award for Innovation
in Undergraduate Instruction, consisting of $2,000 for the personal use of
the faculty member who is selected to receive it, is designed to honor
faculty members who have introduced particularly successful innovations into
undergraduate instruction. Such innovation may or may not involve use of
technology (see also Campus Award for Innovation in Undergraduate Instruction
Using Educational Technologies). Campus Award for Innovation
in Undergraduate Instruction Using Educational Technologies This award, consisting of
$2,000 for the personal use of the faculty member who is selected to receive
it, is designed to honor faculty members who have introduced particularly
successful computing and communication technologies into undergraduate
instruction. |
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Campus Award for Excellence
in Advising Undergraduate Students These two awardsone for faculty
members, one for academic professionalsare designed to foster and reward
excellence in undergraduate academic advising. Each consists of $2,000 for
the personal use of the faculty member or academic professional selected to
receive it. Campus Award for Excellence
in Guiding Undergraduate Research This award is designed to
foster and reward excellence in involving and guiding undergraduate students
in scholarly research. The award provides $2,000 for the personal use of the
faculty member selected to receive it. Course Development Awards The Undergraduate Course
Development Awards program is a competitive campus-level program designed to
support faculty members in significant undergraduate course development
projects. Each award can provide summer salary support and/or additional
project costs (e.g., expenses, equipment, assistants, wages) related to the
proposal. Normally, project costs in excess of the amount of one month's
salary will not be provided. All faculty and academic staff
on regular appointment are eligible to compete for this award, except for
those on "T" appointments and those planning to resign immediately
after their proposed summer's work. The course development project should be
directly related to the individual's current and future role within the
unit's teaching program, and should be one which the unit supports as
important to its teaching mission. Proposals are reviewed at the departmental
and college levels, and then forwarded to the Provost and Vice-Chancellor for
Academic Affairs. Faculty members receiving awards will be asked to submit
reports on the summer's work the following year. Incomplete List of Teachers
Ranked as Excellent by Their Students The Incomplete List contains
the names of teachers who score well above average on rating questionnaires
included in the Instructor and Course Evaluation System (ICES).
Questionnaires are administered each semester to students in classes and
processed by the Office of Instructional Resources. The list is
"incomplete" because teacher involvement is optional. Only those instructors
who elect to distribute ICES questionnaires to their students and who agree
to release collected information for publication are eligible for inclusion
on the list. The objective portion of ICES
questionnaires consists of two general items measuring student satisfaction
with the course and instructor and up to twenty-three additional items of a
more specific nature selected by the instructor and/or department. At least
five enrolled students must complete a questionnaire for the results to be
considered for the Incomplete List. To be included on the
Incomplete List, an instructor must have ratings in the upper 30 percent on
each of two general items: "Rate the instructor's overall teaching
effectiveness" and "Rate the overall quality of this course."
The list is published each semester in the Daily Illini just before
advance enrollment. For more information, contact the Division of Measurement
and Evaluation (333-3490). |
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ENGLISH PROFICIENCY Review of an Instructor's
Ability to Communicate Orally in English All academic departments are to
take steps to ensure that all of their instructors are able to communicate
orally in English in the classroom. The Code on Campus Affairs
contains procedures to follow if students find it difficult to understand an
instructor. English Oral Proficiency of
International Teaching Assistants In an effort to ensure the
highest possible quality of undergraduate teaching and to comply with the
associated 1987 state law, the Office of the Vice-Chancellor for Academic
Affairs has established procedures for assessing, improving, and monitoring
the spoken English proficiency of international teaching assistants. 1. Assessing All graduate students who are
nonnative speakers of English and who wish to have appointments as teaching
assistants must first satisfy the English proficiency admission requirements
of the Graduate College and the employing academic unit, i.e., through the
TOEFL. In addition, each individual must demonstrate passage of either the
Test of Spoken English (TSE) or its U of I institutional version, SPEAK, by a
score of 50 or higher. An appeal process exists for those individuals who
fail the SPEAK assessment in the fall, spring, and summer semesters. 2. Improving The improvement and development
program for nonnative speakers of English has two components: (1) All
prospective teaching assistants who are nonnative speakers of English and who
have passed the TSE or SPEAK are required to attend a week-long Orientation
Program for International Teaching Assistants, held prior to the fall and
spring semesters; and (2) all prospective teaching assistants who have not
passed one of the two tests are required to participate in an approved
remedial program prior to retaking the SPEAK. 3. Monitoring During the first semester that
the teaching assistant who is a nonnative speaker of English provides instruction,
his or her oral proficiency will be monitored by the appointing academic
unit. For additional information
about the oral English proficiency of international teaching assistants,
contact the Office of Instructional Resources (333-3370). COURSE OFFERINGS Course Numbering and Credit
System Courses numbered 100 to 199 are
intended primarily for freshmen and sophomores, although they may also be
taken by juniors and seniors. Courses numbered 200 to 299 are intended for
undergraduate students who satisfy the published prerequisite(s), if any. In
certain instances, 100- and 200-level courses may be taken by graduate
students to make up undergraduate |
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deficiencies, but they may not
be taken for graduate credit. Courses numbered 300 to 399 are intended
primarily for juniors, seniors, and professional and graduate students who
satisfy published prerequisite(s), if any. These courses are offered for
either undergraduate credit (expressed in hours) or graduate credit
(expressed in units). Only graduate students may receive graduate credit.
Courses numbered 400 to 499 are available for professional and graduate
students. In 400-level courses, students register for graduate credit
(expressed in units). An undergraduate, exchange, or professional student may
not register for a 300- or 400-level course for unit credit, but may register
for a 400-level course for hour credit only upon approval of the
student's faculty adviser, the instructor offering the course, and the
executive officer of the department offering the course. Credit for undergraduate
students is counted in semester hours. A semester hour represents the work of
one classroom period for 50 minutes each week through one semester (two
periods per week in an eight-week summer session), or the equivalent in
laboratory work, fieldwork, or approved independent study. In course
descriptions, "three hours" means three hours of credit each
semester or summer session. Credit for graduate students
taking courses numbered 300 and above is usually counted in units. One unit
is considered the equivalent of four semester hours of credit. Course Listings and
Processing All course changes must be
approved by the Office of the Provost and Vice-Chancellor for Academic
Affairs upon the recommendation of the department, the school (if
applicable), the college, and (in the case of 300- and 400-level courses) the
Graduate College. Approved course changes are incorporat- ed into the Courses
catalog, a biennial listing of all courses approved for offering on the
Urbana-Champaign campus, and into the Timetable, a listing of courses
expected to be offered during a given semester or summer session. To request a new course, the
instructor prepares a Course Outline form, available in departmental offices,
and gives it to the departmental executive officer for review, approval, and
transmittal through the appropriate administrative levels to the Office of
the Provost and Vice-Chancellor for Academic Affairs. Requests for new
courses should be submitted to the Office of the Provost at least a semester
before the proposed effective date. A revision in an existing
course may involve a change in department, rubric, number, title,
description, prerequisites, credit, credit restriction, or cross-listing. A
minor revision involving only one of the above changes may be requested in a
letter. For a major revision, a new Course Outline form should be prepared by
the department and forwarded for appropriate approvals. Before a cross-listed
course can be revised or a cross-listing added, the approvals of all
departments, schools, and colleges concerned must also be obtained. To discontinue a course, the
department head writes a letter requesting that the course be dropped and
sends it through the usual channels (as already outlined). Undergraduate Open Seminar 199 (Undergraduate Open
Seminar) courses are special courses for independent study, for
experimentation, or for seminars on topics not treated by regularly scheduled
courses. Requests to initiate such a course and sugges |
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tions for areas of study may be
made by students or faculty members. The seminar may be offered only with the
approval of the faculty member involved and the department head. If the
enrollment in a particular 199 topic offering has averaged 20 or more in each
of two consecutive academic years, the topic may be offered in the third year
only if a proposal to establish it as a regular course is submitted in the
usual manner. A student may accumulate an
unlimited number of credit hours in 199 courses, but no more than 12 such
hours listed on the student's transcript may be counted toward graduation.
Exceptions to this rule are made in cases where a larger number of credit
hours in 199 courses is an integral part of a formal, college-approved
program of study (such as Individual Plans of Study or Unit One). Home Study Courses More than 100 correspondence
courses in 25 subject areas are offered by the Guided Individual Study
Division of the Office of Continuing Education and Public Service. Although
this is a nondegree-granting program, up to 60 semester hours of
correspondence credit may be applied to a University of Illinois degree.
These courses permit individuals to pursue interests, upgrade skills, or earn
college credit without the need to attend regularly scheduled classes. An
individual can enroll at any time and complete work at his or her own pace
within a nine-month period. Courses may generally be taken on a noncredit
basis or for undergraduate credit. Further information and/or a catalog may
be obtained from the Guided Individual Study Division (333-1321). EXAMINATIONS The University must reasonably
accommodate students' religious beliefs, observances, and practices in regard
to the scheduling of the various types of examinations described below. This
policy holds only if, within one week of being informed of the examination
schedule, the student tells the person responsible for scheduling the
examination about the conflict. Any student may appeal an adverse decision by
using the grievance procedures outlined in the Code of Policies and
Regulations Applying to All Students. Final Examinations The following regulations will
be applied in the context that the University must reasonably accommodate a
student's religious beliefs, observances, and practices in regard to the
scheduling of final examinations if the student informs his or her instructor
of the conflict within one week after being informed of the examination
schedule. A student may appeal an adverse decision. (See Rule 24 of the Code
of Policies and Regulations Applying to All Students
[www.uiuc.edu/admin_manual/code/rule_24.html].) All Students 1. Requirement for final
examinations: Final examinations will be given during the scheduled final
examination period for each course, except in a course that has a character
that renders a final examination unnecessary or impracticable. The head or
chairperson of the academic department in which the course is offered
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2. Change in final
examination schedule: The Schedule of Final Examinations for the
Institute of Aviation and all colleges (except Law and Veterinary medicine)
is prepared and published by the Office of the Academic Facilities Officer.
The schedule is found on the World Wide Web www.fms.uiuc.edu/. Follow the
links for Schedules to find the appropriate examination schedule for the
semester. Instructors must give final examinations at the time specified in
the Schedule of Final Examinations unless a change is approved in advance by
the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs. Requests for change
should be submitted through the executive officer of the department in which
the course is offered and the dean of the appropriate college. Permission
will not be granted to those instructors wishing to change final examinations
to a time outside the final examination week. 3. Take-home final examinations:
If take-home final examinations are assigned, they are to be submitted at the
time and date of the regularly scheduled final examination. If instructors
wish to depart from this practice, they must follow the procedure for
changing the final examination schedule as outlined in the preceding item. 4. A student having more
than two consecutive examinations: No student should be required to take
more than two consecutive final examinations within a 24-hour period. In a
semester, this means that a student taking a final examination at 8:00a.m.
and another at 1:30 p.m. on the same day cannot be required to take an
examination that same evening. However, the student could be required to take
an examination beginning at 8:00a.m. the next day. Similarly, a student
having a final examination at 7:00p.m. one day and another at 8:00a.m. the
next day cannot be required to take an examination at 1:30p.m. that second
day. Any student having more than two consecutive final examinations is
entitled to rescheduling as follows if he or she takes the following action
no later than the last day of classes: a) The student must investigate
whether a conflict examination is being held at another time for any of the
examinations involved. Note: Instructional staff members are urged to
announce any conflict final examinations by the last day of classes. b) If a conflict examination
has been scheduled for any of the courses, the student must take one or more
of these conflict examinations. If conflict examinations are offered for more
than one course, the student must take the conflict for the course that has
the largest number of students. c) If no conflict examinations
have been scheduled, the student must contact the instructor of the course
having the largest number of students. The contact must be made no later than
the last day of classes, and that instructor must provide a makeup
examination. 5. Normally in a semester
several combined-sections, conflict, and noncombined examinations are given
at the same time. As a guide to resolving conflicts, an order of priority has
been established within each examination period, and a student should resolve
a conflict using the published examination schedules and the following priority
guidelines. a) National and state
professional examinations (e.g., CPA, actuarial science, Architecture
Registration Examination) take priority over campus final examinations. An
instructor must offer a conflict examination to a student scheduled to take a
national or state professional examination and a campus final examination at
the same time. |
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b) A noncombined course
examination has precedence over any combined-sections or conflict
examination. c) As between courses on the
combined-sections/conflict final examinations schedule, a course in Group (1)
has precedence over all other combined-sections/conflict examinations
scheduled for that time period; a course in Group (2) has precedence over
those in Group (3), and so forth. All courses within a same group have equal
priority, and conflicts within a group must be resolved by the instructors
and departments involved. d) A department offering a
combined-sections final examination must provide a conflict examination if
required to accommodate student conflicts. Undergraduate Students 6. Undergraduate students must
obtain the approval of the dean of their college to defer a final
examination. Undergraduate students who must miss a scheduled examination
should report this fact to the dean of their college as soon as possible and
before the examination period. 7. For satisfactory reasons,
students may be "excused" by the dean of their college and examined
later by their instructor. (See Rule 72.E of the Code of Policies and
Regulations Applying to All Students.) Absence from a final examination
for any other cause is reported as a final grade of "absent" in the
course and counts as a failure. (See Rule 70 of the Code of Policies and
Regulations Applying to All Students.) Graduate Students 8. Graduate students who are
unable to take a final examination at the scheduled time or to complete other
requirements of a course must make individual arrangements with the
instructor. (See Rule 72.E of the Code of Policies and Regulations
Applying to All Students.) 9. Approval of this deferment
by the dean of the Graduate College is not required Special
ExaminationsUndergraduate Students Only Special examinations may be
given only in courses taken in residence at the University of Illinois or in
University of Illinois correspondence courses in which a failing grade (F,
Ab, or NC) has been received. For detailed information concerning special examinations,
consult the Code of Policies and Regulations Applying to All Students,
Rule 85 (www.uiuc.edu/admin_manual/code/rule_85.html). Evening, Midterm, and Hourly
ExaminationsAll Students The rules governing Evening,
Midterm, and Hourly Examinations are found in Rule 83 of the Code of
Policies and Regulations Applying to All Students
(www.uiuc.edu/admin_manual/code/rule_83.html). Academic Work Report
Requirements Faculty members have the
responsibility to provide the University with an individual evaluation of the
work of each student in their classes. Final course grades are to be
submitted to the departmental office within 72 hours of the end of the final
examination in the course. The dean of a college may require progress reports
from each instructor for the work of all freshmen, unclassi |
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fied students and, if called
for, all other students whose work is presumably below a grade of C. Reports
of mid-semester grades are required upon the work of all freshmen. They are
not entered on the student's permanent University record. GRADES Grading System Each course has an approved set
of grades associated with the course. The approved grade set is established
following the normal course approval process within each college. Final
approval comes from the Office of the Provost. A complete description of
grades and symbols used by the University is found in the Code of Policies
and Regulations Applying to All Students, Rules 70 to 72. Credit-No Credit Option This option is designed to
encourage students to explore areas of academic interest that they might
otherwise avoid for fear of poor grades. The deadlines for electing the
credit-no credit option or for returning to a regular grade basis vary by
student category. For a complete statement about the credit-no credit option
as it pertains to undergraduate, professional, and graduate students, see the
Code of Policies and Regulations Applying to All Students, Rule 73. Grade CorrectionsAll
Students When a student's grade has been
incorrectly reported, the instructor may correct the grade with the approval of
the executive officer of the department in which the course is offered.
(Exception: an Ab grade may be changed to a letter grade only with the
additional approval of the dean of the college in which the student was
registered at the time the original grade was assigned.) The regular
supplemental grade report form is used to report the changed grade; all
copies of the form must be submitted to the student's college office. Grades and Students' Rights
to Privacy Under the Family Educational
Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (FERPA), grades, the University ID Number
(UIN), and the Social Security Number (SSN) are part of the student's
educational record and may not be released to a third party without the
written permission of the student. In particular, instructors must avoid
posting grades in any way that allows others to determine the grade, UIN, or
SSN of any student. In general, the campus
discourages the posting of grades. If there is no practical alternative, we
suggest the following guidelines to remain within the law: 1. Do not display student
scores or grades publicly in association with names, Social Security Numbers,
UINs, or other personal identifiers. Using a partial SSN or UIN is also
forbidden. 2. Do not post a copy of your
class list or Final Grade Collection List, even with the names removed. These
lists are in alphabetical order. 3. Do ask each student to give
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4. Do sort your list in
numerical order. Displaying the list in alphabetical order allows students to
infer other students' identities. 5. Do not put papers or lab
reports containing student names and grades in publicly accessible places. In
particular, do not put papers into a common box where students must go
through everyone else's papers to find their own. Students are not to have
access to the scores or grades of others in the class. Access to a student's record is
limited to individuals with a legitimate educational need to know. All other
individuals must obtain the student's written consent to access the record. Alleged Capricious
GradingAll Students Capricious grading, as that
term is used herein, constitutes any of the following: 1. The assignment of a grade to
a particular student on some basis other than performance in the course; 2. The assignment of a grade to
a particular student by resorting to more exacting or demanding standards
than were applied to other students registered for the same credit in that
course; 3. The assignment of a grade
representing a substantial departure from the instructor's previously
announced standards. Specific procedures for dealing
with allegations of capricious grading are found in Rule 26 of the Code of
Policies and Regulations Applying to All Students
(www.uiuc.edu/admin_manual/code/rule_26.html). Registration, Withdrawal,
and Absences Consult the Code of Policies
and Regulations Applying to All Students and the current term's Timetable
for detailed information on registration, registration of listeners or
visitors, changes in undergraduate study programs, withdrawal of
undergraduate students from courses, and absences from class. No student shall
be allowed to remain in a classroom or laboratory who is not properly
registered in the class. Instructors must prohibit attendance until such time
as a student's name appears on the class roster. Class Attendance Class attendance is expected of
all students at the University of Illinois. The University does not have an
established policy on excused absences. Instructors should accommodate any
student who is absent from class or misses a work assignment for reasons
beyond the student's control such as illness, death in the family, or other
such emergency. The student must provide an explanation to the instructor and
supply supporting evidence as required by the instructor. The student must
make arrangements with the instructor to make up missed work expeditiously.
The instructor decides when a student's absence becomes excessive and shall
report this fact to the student's college dean. The dean of the student's
college, in consultation with the instructor, may determine that the
student's attendance has become so irregular that the student's scholarship
is likely to be impaired so as to make continuation in the course
unprofitable. The dean may require the student to withdraw from the course
with a grade of W or F. For a complete statement of policy, see rule 34 of
the Code of Policies and Regulations Applying to All Students
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No student shall be allowed to
remain in a classroom or laboratory who is not properly registered in the
class. Instructors must prohibit attendance until such time as a student's
name appears on the class roster. Instructors may establish their own rules concerning
class attendance. However, any student who has not attended and who appears
on a class roster as of the third week of instruction must be reported to the
dean of the student's college. A similar report shall be made upon receipt of
the final class roster. If a student who has never attended remains on the
grading roster, the instructor shall assign a grade of either F or Ab. No
other grade is appropriate in this case. MISCELLANEOUS Textbooks and Teaching
Supplies Information about ordering
textbooks and teaching supplies is provided in the Campus Administrative
Manual (www.fs.uiuc.edu/cam). Questions and problems concerning textbook orders should be
directed to the Textbook Office of the Illini Union Bookstore (244-3741). Campus Honors Program The Campus Honors Program (CHP)
is a four-year program open to all undergraduates regardless of curricula.
Only approximately 125 new students can be admitted to the CHP each year as
first-year students. A few additional students, however, may join the program
on an off-cycle basis at the beginning of the sophomore year. The program
fosters close, collaborative relationships between exceptional students and
distinguished faculty members through small, specially developed courses; a
faculty mentor system; and a competitive summer grant program for funding
student travel and research projects. Faculty members who teach CHP courses
can receive summer salaries for new-course development and stipends for
courses taught on an overload basis, or their departments can receive funds
to hire additional teaching assistants. For additional information, call
244-0922. Student Field Trips Student field trips lasting
more than one day are to be paid for by the student and not the University.
Campus policy permits the payment of transportation charges for student field
trips when the trip is completed in one day, starts and ends at the campus,
and is required of every student in the class. Individual Rights in the
Classroom The professor, in the classroom
and in conference, should encourage free discussion, inquiry, and expression.
Student performance should be evaluated solely on an academic basis, not on
the basis of opinions or conduct in matters unrelated to academic standards. Protection of Freedom of
Expression. Students
should be free to take reasoned exception to the data or views offered in any
course of study and to reserve judgment about matters of opinion, but they
are responsible for learning the content of any course of study for which
they are enrolled. |
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Protection against Improper
Academic Evaluation.
Students should have protection through orderly procedures against prejudiced
or capricious academic evaluation. At the same time, they are responsible for
maintaining standards of academic performance established for each course in
which they are enrolled. Protection against Improper
Disclosure. Information
about student views, beliefs, and political associations that professors
acquire in the course of their work as instructors, advisers, and counselors
should be considered confidential. Protection against improper disclosure is
a serious professional obligation. Judgments of ability and character may be
provided under appropriate circumstances, normally with the knowledge or
consent of the student. Orderly Conduct of Classes. The professor is in charge of the
orderly conduct of the class and may exclude a student or a visitor who does
not comply with a reasonable request in this regard. Academic Integrity - All
Students The University has the
responsibility for maintaining academic integrity to guard the quality of
scholarship on the University's campus and to protect those who depend upon
the University's knowledge and integrity. It is the responsibility of the
student to refrain from academic dishonesty, to refrain from conduct that may
lead to suspicion of academic dishonesty, and to refrain from conduct that
aids others in academic dishonesty. Specific definitions of
academic dishonesty and its penalties can be found in the Code of Policies
and Regulations Applying to All Students. |
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