| In 2009-2010, Student Conduct and Community Standards addressed 37 cases involving student organizations. |
The Center for Student Conduct is a center of Student Affairs
Support the Center for Student Conduct | UC Berkeley Homepage
Non-Academic
Completely fill out the Incident Report Form to file a report for an alleged non-academic policy violation.
Academic
First Steps
When you are faced with a possible case of academic dishonesty involving your students, the Center for Student Conduct recommends that you collect all the documentation on the situation, such as statements from graduate student instructors or other witnesses, and the exam, paper, or assignment in question. Then arrange a meeting with the student to discuss your suspicions with the student. Here is some specific advice (from Barbara Gross Davis, Tools for Teaching, pp. 301-2).
Resolution Options
1. Resolve Yourself
Faculty Disposition for Academic Dishonesty: With the student, complete this form and assign an “academic sanction”. Upon receipt of the Faculty Disposition, the Center for Student Conduct will send the student a “notification” and file the Disposition for the purpose of information ONLY. The Disposition alone will not create an official conduct record with the Center for Student Conduct. If the student has previous violations on file or the Center deems the violation egregious, the Center may pursue more severe violations. In the event of future violations, the Center may consider the Disposition in assigning sanctions.
2. Refer Directly to the Center for Student Conduct
Discipline Referral for Academic Dishonesty: Complete this form to forward the case to the Center for administrative review and resolution. For full judicial procedures once Center receives the case, click here. Once you refer the case, the Center will work with you to resolve the case by notifying you of the receipt of the complaint and the possible code sections violated, requesting a recommendation from you on the sanction(s) should the student be found in violation, and notifying you when the case is completed. When a case is under investigation by the Center, you should refrain from assigning a final grade for the course. Should the course conclude before the investigation is completed, it is recommended that you submit an “Incomplete.”
Academic Sanctions
Academic sanctions by instructors are governed by a November 7, 1987 memo from the Academic Senate Committee on Courses to all instructors. This memo states that “[a]n instructor may assign an F grade both to the assignment in which the cheating occurred and, when the offense is sufficiently serious, for the course as a whole. A student should, however, always be informed of the action taken. The student should also be told of the right to a grade appeal, if he or she considers the grade unfair.” Copies of this memo at the Academic Senate, 320 Stephens Hall.