An academic/student plagiarism












3















I am an administrator of a university in U.K. A student has been found guilty of plagiarism and is facing the harshest punishment - 0 in the course and no opportunity to retake which will get him out of the school. However, he is also an academic. Do we need to inform the Department Head at his university even though university is a completely separate entity from ours. The course is different from what the student teaches at the other university. Concerned about the data breach and confidentiality issues. As academics do we have duty to report this? Please help.










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  • Doesn't it go on his transcript as a violation? I would think he has a duty to provide all transcripts to his employer(s) putting it on him not you.

    – A Simple Algorithm
    4 hours ago











  • He already is employed in this other university. I don't think they need to consistently provide transcripts as he's already hired. Plus this course is different from what he's teaching.

    – selma
    4 hours ago








  • 4





    I think you need to refer to your local laws and university policies on privacy of student records. I don't have a strong feeling as to whether you have any sort of ethical duty to report this to the person's employing university, but it certainly wouldn't be such a strong duty that you should violate the law or risk your job in order to do so.

    – Nate Eldredge
    3 hours ago


















3















I am an administrator of a university in U.K. A student has been found guilty of plagiarism and is facing the harshest punishment - 0 in the course and no opportunity to retake which will get him out of the school. However, he is also an academic. Do we need to inform the Department Head at his university even though university is a completely separate entity from ours. The course is different from what the student teaches at the other university. Concerned about the data breach and confidentiality issues. As academics do we have duty to report this? Please help.










share|improve this question









New contributor




selma is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • Doesn't it go on his transcript as a violation? I would think he has a duty to provide all transcripts to his employer(s) putting it on him not you.

    – A Simple Algorithm
    4 hours ago











  • He already is employed in this other university. I don't think they need to consistently provide transcripts as he's already hired. Plus this course is different from what he's teaching.

    – selma
    4 hours ago








  • 4





    I think you need to refer to your local laws and university policies on privacy of student records. I don't have a strong feeling as to whether you have any sort of ethical duty to report this to the person's employing university, but it certainly wouldn't be such a strong duty that you should violate the law or risk your job in order to do so.

    – Nate Eldredge
    3 hours ago
















3












3








3








I am an administrator of a university in U.K. A student has been found guilty of plagiarism and is facing the harshest punishment - 0 in the course and no opportunity to retake which will get him out of the school. However, he is also an academic. Do we need to inform the Department Head at his university even though university is a completely separate entity from ours. The course is different from what the student teaches at the other university. Concerned about the data breach and confidentiality issues. As academics do we have duty to report this? Please help.










share|improve this question









New contributor




selma is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I am an administrator of a university in U.K. A student has been found guilty of plagiarism and is facing the harshest punishment - 0 in the course and no opportunity to retake which will get him out of the school. However, he is also an academic. Do we need to inform the Department Head at his university even though university is a completely separate entity from ours. The course is different from what the student teaches at the other university. Concerned about the data breach and confidentiality issues. As academics do we have duty to report this? Please help.







plagiarism united-kingdom privacy






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selma is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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share|improve this question









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selma is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









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edited 3 hours ago









Nate Eldredge

108k34310408




108k34310408






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asked 4 hours ago









selmaselma

191




191




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New contributor





selma is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






selma is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • Doesn't it go on his transcript as a violation? I would think he has a duty to provide all transcripts to his employer(s) putting it on him not you.

    – A Simple Algorithm
    4 hours ago











  • He already is employed in this other university. I don't think they need to consistently provide transcripts as he's already hired. Plus this course is different from what he's teaching.

    – selma
    4 hours ago








  • 4





    I think you need to refer to your local laws and university policies on privacy of student records. I don't have a strong feeling as to whether you have any sort of ethical duty to report this to the person's employing university, but it certainly wouldn't be such a strong duty that you should violate the law or risk your job in order to do so.

    – Nate Eldredge
    3 hours ago





















  • Doesn't it go on his transcript as a violation? I would think he has a duty to provide all transcripts to his employer(s) putting it on him not you.

    – A Simple Algorithm
    4 hours ago











  • He already is employed in this other university. I don't think they need to consistently provide transcripts as he's already hired. Plus this course is different from what he's teaching.

    – selma
    4 hours ago








  • 4





    I think you need to refer to your local laws and university policies on privacy of student records. I don't have a strong feeling as to whether you have any sort of ethical duty to report this to the person's employing university, but it certainly wouldn't be such a strong duty that you should violate the law or risk your job in order to do so.

    – Nate Eldredge
    3 hours ago



















Doesn't it go on his transcript as a violation? I would think he has a duty to provide all transcripts to his employer(s) putting it on him not you.

– A Simple Algorithm
4 hours ago





Doesn't it go on his transcript as a violation? I would think he has a duty to provide all transcripts to his employer(s) putting it on him not you.

– A Simple Algorithm
4 hours ago













He already is employed in this other university. I don't think they need to consistently provide transcripts as he's already hired. Plus this course is different from what he's teaching.

– selma
4 hours ago







He already is employed in this other university. I don't think they need to consistently provide transcripts as he's already hired. Plus this course is different from what he's teaching.

– selma
4 hours ago






4




4





I think you need to refer to your local laws and university policies on privacy of student records. I don't have a strong feeling as to whether you have any sort of ethical duty to report this to the person's employing university, but it certainly wouldn't be such a strong duty that you should violate the law or risk your job in order to do so.

– Nate Eldredge
3 hours ago







I think you need to refer to your local laws and university policies on privacy of student records. I don't have a strong feeling as to whether you have any sort of ethical duty to report this to the person's employing university, but it certainly wouldn't be such a strong duty that you should violate the law or risk your job in order to do so.

– Nate Eldredge
3 hours ago












1 Answer
1






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oldest

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4














This may be covered by privacy law in UK as it would be in US. You need to consult with a lawyer before you take any action that isn't already embodied in your policies, which I assume have already been vetted.



If you are permitted to inform the other university you should also consider whether you are liable to civil action if you do so. But your lawyer will have advice about that as well.






share|improve this answer
























  • Good question, good answer. An interesting case where law and academic code of honour may be in conflict. If in conflict, law supersedes academic code.

    – Captain Emacs
    2 hours ago












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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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active

oldest

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active

oldest

votes









4














This may be covered by privacy law in UK as it would be in US. You need to consult with a lawyer before you take any action that isn't already embodied in your policies, which I assume have already been vetted.



If you are permitted to inform the other university you should also consider whether you are liable to civil action if you do so. But your lawyer will have advice about that as well.






share|improve this answer
























  • Good question, good answer. An interesting case where law and academic code of honour may be in conflict. If in conflict, law supersedes academic code.

    – Captain Emacs
    2 hours ago
















4














This may be covered by privacy law in UK as it would be in US. You need to consult with a lawyer before you take any action that isn't already embodied in your policies, which I assume have already been vetted.



If you are permitted to inform the other university you should also consider whether you are liable to civil action if you do so. But your lawyer will have advice about that as well.






share|improve this answer
























  • Good question, good answer. An interesting case where law and academic code of honour may be in conflict. If in conflict, law supersedes academic code.

    – Captain Emacs
    2 hours ago














4












4








4







This may be covered by privacy law in UK as it would be in US. You need to consult with a lawyer before you take any action that isn't already embodied in your policies, which I assume have already been vetted.



If you are permitted to inform the other university you should also consider whether you are liable to civil action if you do so. But your lawyer will have advice about that as well.






share|improve this answer













This may be covered by privacy law in UK as it would be in US. You need to consult with a lawyer before you take any action that isn't already embodied in your policies, which I assume have already been vetted.



If you are permitted to inform the other university you should also consider whether you are liable to civil action if you do so. But your lawyer will have advice about that as well.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 3 hours ago









BuffyBuffy

56.3k16176272




56.3k16176272













  • Good question, good answer. An interesting case where law and academic code of honour may be in conflict. If in conflict, law supersedes academic code.

    – Captain Emacs
    2 hours ago



















  • Good question, good answer. An interesting case where law and academic code of honour may be in conflict. If in conflict, law supersedes academic code.

    – Captain Emacs
    2 hours ago

















Good question, good answer. An interesting case where law and academic code of honour may be in conflict. If in conflict, law supersedes academic code.

– Captain Emacs
2 hours ago





Good question, good answer. An interesting case where law and academic code of honour may be in conflict. If in conflict, law supersedes academic code.

– Captain Emacs
2 hours ago










selma is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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