Georgia Regents University - Hull College
of Business
ECON2105: Macroeconomics & ECON2106:
Microeconomics
ONLINE COURSES – SUMMER 2014
INSTRUCTOR INFORMATION
Professor:
B. Schmidt, MBA, Ed.S.
Office:
Room E130, Allgood Hall
Email:
bschmidt@gru.edu
Office Phone:
706-667-4535 (do not leave message)
Office Hours:
M lab chat at
noon
HCOB:
706-737-1560
T 12-4PM
Text:
706.680.6123 (tell me which class)
& Anytime by appointment
Public Safety:
706-737-1401
Teaching
Philosophy:
Professor
Schmidt believes that a student takes the most from a college course
when the course material relates to real life. In order for a course
to be a life impacting experience it cannot simply be a series of
dates in which students spew back memorized text material in the
form of an test. >>>>So be ready to interact, discuss, raise
questions, and even disagree with the professor and classmates on
various topics, concepts, and types of assignments. This is how
valuable, retainable learning takes place. {Take a look at Bloom’s
Learning Theory}
COURSE INFORMATION
Instructor
Website:
http://hull.aug.edu/bschmidt
Text:
Foundations of Economics-6e Bade & Parkin. ISBN(13): 978013283105 (macroµ
texts)
or
Foundations of Macroecnomics-6e Bade & Parkin. ISBN(13):
978013283100
or
Foundations of Microecnomics-6e Bade & Parkin. ISBN(13): 978013283088
Pearson Online Lab Access code must also be purchased if text is not
purchased through GRU.
Course
Description:
ECON2105:
Macroeconomics;
This
introductory course explains the nature of the economic problems
which any society must solve and how a mixed economy solves these
problems. Topics covered include supply and demand, income and
employment, money and banking, and fiscal
policy.
Prerequisite(s): MATH 1101 or MATH 1111 with a grade of C or better.
ECON 2106: Microeconomics;
The determination of prices and output levels and the explanation of
economic equilibrium of individual economic units-the consumer, the
firm, and the industry.
Prerequisite(s): Same as above
Grading Scale:
Knowledge Evaluation:
|
Homework
|
20%
|
|
Quizzes
|
20%
|
|
Tests
(1-2)
|
10%
|
|
Test 3
|
20%
|
|
Discussion Board
|
15%
|
|
Study
Plan Hours
|
15%
|
|
A
|
90-100
|
|
B
|
80-89
|
|
C
|
70-79
|
|
D
|
60-69
|
|
F
|
59 and below
|
NOTE:
Grades are not ‘given out’ by the professor; they are
‘earned’ by the student.
Please make sure that you ‘earn’ a grade with which you can live.
THINK of it like a baseball game and as the professor I
simply RECORD YOUR SCORES.
Course Requirements:
- Orientation
Quiz & Attendance: Each student desiring to remain enrolled in
the online economics course must complete an Orientation Quiz
within the first 5 Days of class. Exceptions WILL NOT be
made.
- First,
attend the scheduled orientation on campus
or review the
Online Orientation Document on Professor Schmidt’s website.
- Then
register in the online course lab environment and complete
the Orientation quiz. Students must earn 90% on the quiz
prior to the deadline to prevent from being dropped from the
course for nonattendance.
- On time
completion of course assignments is required. Please see the
course policies section below for details.
- All
students must have access to a computer with reliable
internet access.
- If
internet service interruption is experienced during an test
or quiz the student’s grade may be a zero for the
assignment. Students should log off, open a new browser, and
log back in to complete their quiz as time allows.
- See
Course Online Lab requirement under the ‘text’ section
above. *Note* The software also specifies technological
requirements. All campus computers are in compliance with
these requirements.
- All
students are expected to check the Announcement section of
the Online lab DAILY.
-
Numerous tools are made available through the Online Lab
software. Daily research and reading in this format is
necessary for exemplary performance in this course.
- Software
utilized in this course:
- MyGRU:
Desire2Learn: First week of classes only for announcements
-
Professor’s Website: Syllabus, Schedules, Extra Credit, All
course related helps
-
http://pearsonmylabandmastering.com:
Course Announcements from professor, All course assignments,
grades
COURSE ASSIGNMENTS
The
assignments and activities in this course build throughout the
semester. Each student’s
preparation of material, use of study groups, and use of the
professor as a resource is critical to the learning process and
overall success in this course.
THIS IS A SELF STUDY COURSE, NOT AN INDEPENDENT STUDY COURSE.
There are scheduled assignments and tests with due dates. All work
is completed online. Tutorial support is available through GRU in
the CAP Center and the assigned GRU faculty member.
Please Note: Self Study
is not for everyone… If in doubt, take the face-to-face course.
**PLEASE NOTE: A 'Orientation Quiz' MUST BE PASSED with a grade of
90% in order to begin chapter HW assignments.
Also, a score of 70% on chapter HW is required to unlock the
corresponding chapter Quiz assignment**
*The Scores for the Orientation Quiz IS NOT Calculated into a
Student’s Overall Grade*
Study Plan
Hours:
- Students
whom utilize the study plan regularly earn significantly higher
letter grades than those whom do not. The correlation between
lab use and improved performance is absolute and high.
Therefore, students
are now required to work at least 10 hours in the study plan
throughout the semester.
Please Note: Click the ‘Show All Chapters’ link to
see the page with all extra problems organized by chapter
section.
- Study
Plan hours will be cleared for a fresh start the day after
the Attendance Drop.
- A
student’s study plan grade will either be a ZERO or AS
EARNED in the lab:
-
Student with
10 or more hours in the MyEconLab Study Plan = Study Plan
Grade will be AS
EARNED
-
Student with
less than 10 hours in the MyEconLab Study Plan = Study Plan
Grade will be a
ZERO
Discussion
Board:
-
These
will not occur each week. Deadlines are posted in the course
schedule on the professor’s website.
-
Various
topics and/or graphs will be placed in the Online Lab
environment. Students are to actively discuss the topic/graph
and defend their positions. Nonresponsive students will not
receive credit. Students with inaccurate responses will receive
credit as long as their responses are not comical and/or
disruptive. {Responses are graded on length, content, grammar,
and appropriateness}
-
The
purpose of the exercise is to have an ongoing intellectual
conversation among various view points. This will require
various responses within a limited number of threads to
numerous people on each topic/graph. Conversations are best when
maintained within small groups. [Respond once to all 5 different
threads earns zero credit.]
- How
to achieve an Excellent grade on the Discussion Board
assignments
-
Each student should make at least 4 or 5 postings within
less than three threads (per assignment)
-
Each posting should be content driven, 4 to 5 sentences
in length, utilize correct grammar and punctuation, and
encourage further conversation.
-
Posts that will not count toward a student’s grade on the
Discussion Board Assignment
-
Posts containing three or less sentences and/or numerous
grammatical errors
-
Posts that are blank, extraordinarily offensive, or off
topic.
*NOTE: HW, Quizzes, Tests are
designed to provide increasing levels of rigor.
Homework
(Easy):
- Each
chapter homework is clearly posted in the Course Online Lab
environment under ‘Assignments- Do Homework’.
- Group work
is encouraged.
A grade
of 70% or better is required in order to take the corresponding
quiz.
- Each
chapter homework is due by 5:00PM on the day in which the
current semester course schedule indicates.
- Homework
Query Information:
- No time
limit; Unlimited attempts before the due date (highest score
is taken); Unlimited review
-
If a score of 70 is not reached before the due date then a
‘zero’ is given for the corresponding chapter quiz
- *HW's
can be worked after the due date by entering the password
'five'. If this password is entered the students HW score
will change however, a 5% per day deduction is subtracted
from the overall performance on the HW. The new overall
score is counted in the grade book. If over 70 points, the
chapter quiz will be unlocked. If your new final score is
69.4 - Please move on to the next chapter. There are no
further accommodations.
-
Please Note: Grade of 100 on Ch2 HW worked 11 days late
= 100 – (5*11)
= a grade of 45)
Quizzes
(Moderate Difficulty):
- Each
chapter quiz will be posted in the Course Online Lab environment
under ‘Assignments- Take quiz/test’.
- Students
are to complete the chapter quizzes on an individual basis.
- Each
chapter quiz is due by 5:00PM on the day in which the current
semester course schedule indicates.
- Quiz Query
Information:
- 90
minute time limit;
Student may review
only after the deadline.
- Two
attempts before the due date (average score is taken)
- Quiz
questions/results can be reviewed by making an appointment
with the professor
-
Questions are algorithm based and scrambled; A portion of
the questions come from the publishers test bank
Tests
(Difficult):
- Each test
will be posted in the Course Online Lab environment under
‘Assignments- Take quiz/test’.
- Students
are to complete the chapter quizzes on an individual basis.
- Each test
is due by 5:00PM on the day in which the current semester course
schedule indicates.
- Tests are
given in the same manner as the HW's and quizzes; Test #4 is
weighted higher than tests 1-3.
- Each
Test will cover all of the course material up to that point
of the course. (Mastery of the material can only be
demonstrated through practical application and critical
thinking which represent true understanding of critical
facts and principles.)
- Test Query
Information:
-
90 minute time limit;
Student may review
only immediately after submission.
- One
attempts before the due date
-
Test questions/results can be reviewed by making an
appointment with the professor
-
Questions are algorithm based and scrambled; All
questions come from the publishers test bank
COURSE POLICIES
- Students
are to check their campus email accounts and Course Online Lab
Environment Announcements
DAILY.
- All
assignments are to be completed via the Online Lab. Emailed and
hand delivered assignments are not accepted.
- Any student
not enrolled in the correct Online Lab Environment Course within
the first FIVE days of classes will be DROPPED from the course
per GRU’s attendance policy.
-
Assignments are NOT accepted late under any circumstance.
Due dates are clearly defined
in the course schedule online as well as this document. Changes
to these dates will be posted in the online lab announcements
with at least a 24 hour notice. Various opportunities in which
there are no chapter assignments due are provided throughout the
course enabling students to get ahead/remain ahead of deadlines.
- Disability
and Testing Center: If you require extra testing time or other
accommodations, the proper paperwork must be received from the
testing center within the first week of the course in order for
the accommodations to be made.
-
One Week to
Challenge your Grade:
If you believe a mistake has been made in online software’s
scoring of an item please email me your name, course, and the
assignment name, and number of suspect question. If you are
correct, I will rescore your assignment as long as you contact
me within a week from the items due date.
- Please
review the ‘Frequently asked questions’ section of the syllabus
prior to emailing the professor with questions.
- Course
interaction will predominantly take place via email and the
online lab. Students are responsible for initiating contact with
the professor.
- Students
are encouraged to contact the professor at the first indication
of difficulty with the course, scheduling, or a situational
crisis which may impact the course outcome.
- When
contacting the professor
i.
Please
include your name and course number in ALL email communications.
ii.
Be
specific with your request. Vague questions will receive vague
answers.
1.
ExampleàSubject: ECON2105 online Nickie Williams Message: Will you please check
#7 on chapter 2 homework. I believe the computer scored it
incorrectly. If not, what did I do wrong?
iii.
If you
do not receive a response from me within 24 hours please attempt to
contact me again. With 250 students each semester some emails
inadvertently get overlooked.
iv.
Appointments are not necessary when coming by my office. However,
you should come prepared with a page number, specific topic, or
specific problem. Please do not come by and tell me you need help
with chapter 7. I cannot go over entire chapters individually with
each student.
v.
To
schedule an appointment: Email me 2 or 3 times that work for you and
I will choose the one that works best.
vi.
Use
the ‘Ask my Instructor’ link within the lab whenever possible!
-
Extra credit:
Extra
Credit is not given on an individual basis; if offered it is
outlined in the syllabus or course website and made available to
the entire class. There
are no other exceptions or help given outside of the ‘normal’
course experience.
- Any
student completing activities as prescribed below will
receive extra credit given as 0-100 points.
i.
Completing 10 hours of
career/community volunteer work and submitting a portfolio that
includes all required items (time log, formal paper relating the
experience to technology, etc). Papers are due
2 weeks prior to the last
day of classes. Each student may complete 2 papers; 1 career
related and 1 nonprofit related. Examples are available on my
website. Check Website for Specific Details.
EXTRA CREDIT IS A PRIVILEGE
– BE SURE TO READ ALL OF THE INFORMATION/GUIDELINES ON MY WEBSITE
PRIOR TO COMPLETING EXTRA CREDIT. REWRITES, RESUBMISSIONS, LATE
SUBMISSIONS WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED
***PLEASE SEE THE
EXTRA CREDIT GUIDELINES SECTION ON THE PROFESSORS WEBSITE
FOR DETAILS***
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
·
Technical problems
with the Online Lab: Contact the publisher at 1-800-677-6337 M-F
8am-8pm EST and Sunday 5pm-12am EST or visit the ‘student center’
through the link on Pearson lab main page or utilize their live chat
feature. Please do not email your instructor or call GRU’s ITS
department, as this product is maintained and serviced by the
textbook publisher and the aforementioned persons cannot provide
assistance.
·
*Online Students*: I do
not reset quizzes. Please be sure that you are utilizing a reliable computer and
internet connection prior to beginning your quizzes. If your
internet connection is lost during a test or quiz. Wait a few
minutes and try to log back in to complete your quiz. If your time
elapses, I am sorry, but I will not reset your quiz.
·
I will happily discuss
your grades with you at any time that you prearrange or during
office hours. I will NOT discuss your grades over the telephone,
email, in the hallway, or in the classroom.
·
The grade shown in the
Online Lab is NOT your official grade.
It is a basic idea of your current score but does not include all of
your assignments or participation scores. Official grades will be
submitted to the registrar at the end of the semester. You may
download the grade calculation worksheet from website if you like to
keep track of your grades.
·
Late assignments
are NOT accepted under any circumstance. If you miss an assignment,
you should begin to work on the assignment for next week and get
ahead in the course work to prevent a reoccurrence.
{If your system went down, you
received a connection error, your computer crashes costing you
hundreds to repair, or your two year old spills coffee on your lap
top and your assignment is LATE, your grade is ZERO}
·
Athletes and working students
with schedule conflicts. It is your responsibility to work ahead in
the course as to ensure deadlines are not missed.
·
Withdrawal:
Each student must complete and submit the paperwork to withdraw.
Please review the withdrawal process outlined on my website for my
courses. GRU guidelines are strictly followed with after midterm
withdrawals. Please review this section of the student handbook.
·
Is she really going to read this?
If I ask you to complete it, you can be assured that I intend
to read it.
·
Why doesn’t she accept anything late?
When you graduate and obtain a position in the ‘real world’
tardiness to work, missing deadlines, inappropriate behavior, poor
time management, or your dog urinating on your lap top will not be
viable excuses or tolerated for extended periods of time. Think of
my class as preparation for this environment. One day, instead of an
undesired grade on an assignment or in a course it may be your car,
house, or groceries that suffer.
·
This class is harder than I thought.
Businesses hire college graduates for their critical thinking
skills, time management skills, ability to set and achieve difficult
goals, exposure to various aspects of life and ability to flourish
in social settings more so than they do for their knowledge base.
All of these skills are obtained and refined during the
undergraduate experience. As your professor, I do my part in
improving upon these skills by setting high standards, supporting
you in your achievement of them, creating assignments and monitoring
discussions around topics and concepts that require the application
of learned material – not the reiteration of memorized definitions.
·
How do I study for this class?
Treat this class like a math class. Work on it every day.
This course is unlike any other course you have taken at this point.
It is a social science course that requires big picture thinking
(like history, sociology, psychology, and political science), but it
also requires a mathematical foundation, an understanding of
mathematical concepts, and builds upon these foundations as each
chapter is covered (just like a math course). Thus, you cannot wait
until the night before an test to study and perform well.
·
Everyone can’t be perfect all the time.
And this professor doesn’t claim to be so either. As humans
do, we all make mistakes. If you believe you have witnessed such an
incident on my behalf, please inform me immediately. I strive to be
fair as much as possible despite the world's unbiased wrath.
·
How to improve your Quiz grades
o
Complete chapter homework with
the best score you can obtain
o
Review main concepts from
chapters covered
o
Take quiz – noting topics and
concepts covered in your course notebook
o
Study the concepts that you
jotted down as you took the quiz
o
Utilize the second attempt at
the quiz
o
*Remember you can only review
quizzes after their deadline, to assist in studying for tests.
·
Study thoroughly the material
for each chapter. Recommended study plan listed below.
o
Work in study groups
o
Read each assigned chapter
o
Practice:
See practice explanation
below
o
Complete Homework
o
Practice:
See practice explanation
below
o
Quiz Attempt #1:
Take notes on concepts covered in case you decide to utilize your 2nd
attempt
o
Study
specific concepts covered on quizzes;
Practice more as needed
o
Quiz Attempt #2; (not
required)
o
Practice:
See practice explanation
below
o
– Repeat steps 1-7 for other
chapters
o
Review quizzes in preparation
of Test; Practice more as
needed
o
Complete
Test
1. READ
-
Read to help
decipher and learn main concepts as you read:
-
Utilize the
lecture slides on the powerpoint webpage
-
Utilize the
Key Topics sheet provided in the online lab resources
-
Review the
example exam questions for this chapter to assist with
application based reading
2. HOMEWORK
-
Be sure to
actually work the HW. Do NOT just click through it - your exam
grade will suffer!
-
You have 3
attempts (try similar) and 3 check my answers for each attempt -
for a total of 9 attempts at a question/concept
4. QUIZ ATTEMPT #1
-
Take notes on
concepts covered in case you decide to utilize your 2nd attempt
-
If you like your
score - this is your grade, there is no need to utilize the 2nd
attempt just move on to the next chapter
-
If you utilize
Quiz Attempt #2 your two scores will be averaged
3. PRACTICE (Various Options)
-
Studyplan:
-
Instructor
Assignable:
-
Sample Test
-
Study Guide
-
Chapter Review
Questions/Quiz
-
Various Online
Lab Resources
-
News articles and
Clips: Use these to help you relate the concepts being learned
with real life happenings
-
Animations: Use
these to help walk you through graphs or math problems step by
step at a medium to slow pace
How to get started in
this course:
1. Attend Orientation
2. Purchase textbook
and Pearson Lab access code
3. Register at
pearsonmylabandmastering.com with the correct course code
4. Follow course
schedule and begin working assignments
5. Contact professor
with any questions
Resources for this
course:
1.
Textbook
2.
Professor
3.
Pearson Lab website
exercises and tools
4.
The professor’s Website
5.
Free Tutor (Set up
appointments in the CAP center)
***PLEASE BE SURE TO
REVIEW THE SECTIONS INDICATED ABOVE ON THE PROFESSORS WEBSITE
FOR FULL ASSIGNMENT AND
SYLLABUS DETAILS***
COURSE SCHEDULE Note:
These dates and assignments are subject to change according to the
discretion of the professor.
|
SUMMER 2014 |
|
SSOL |
MACRO |
MICRO |
|
|
Class Week |
Mon/Wed Dates |
Course Content Material |
Course Content Material |
Course Assignments / Items Due |
|
All Dates are Tues/Thurs |
ALL STUDENTS WILL BE DROPPED FROM THE COURSE IF HE/SHE DOES
NOT: 1. Register in Pearson Labs
(www.pearsonmylabandmastering.com) (Trial registration is
available) 2. Complete the Orientation Quiz with a grade
of 90% or better within FIRST WEEK of classes |
|
Wk 1 |
20-May-14 |
Week 1 |
Week 1 |
Use This Opportunity to Get Ahead in Assignments LATE
ASSIGNMENTS ARE NOT ACCEPTED - NO EXCEPTIONS |
|
22-May-14 |
Work Ahead |
Work Ahead |
|
Wk 2 |
27-May-14 |
Chapter 3, 4 |
Chapter 4 |
Homework for Chapters Indicated |
|
29-May-14 |
|
|
Chapter Quiz for Chapters Indicated |
|
Wk 3 |
3-Jun-14 |
Chapter 5, 6 |
Chapter 5, 6 |
Homework for Chapters Indicated |
|
5-Jun-14 |
|
|
Chapter Quiz for Chapters
Indicated;
TEST #1 due Thursday 5PM |
|
Wk 4 |
10-Jun-14 |
Chapter 7, 8 |
Chapter 7, 8 |
Homework for Chapters Indicated |
|
12-Jun-14 |
|
|
Chapter Quiz for Chapters Indicated |
|
Wk 5 |
17-Jun-14 |
Week 5 |
Week 5 |
Use This Opportunity to Get Ahead in Assignments LATE
ASSIGNMENTS ARE NOT ACCEPTED - NO EXCEPTIONS |
|
19-Jun-14 |
Work Ahead |
Work Ahead |
|
Wk 6 |
24-Jun-14 |
Chapter 9, 10 |
Chapter 13, 14 |
Homework for Chapters Indicated |
|
26-Jun-14 |
|
|
Chapter Quiz for Chapters
Indicated;
TEST #2 due Thursday 5PM |
|
Wk 7 |
1-Jul-14 |
Chapter 11, 12 |
Chapter 15, 16 |
Homework for Chapters Indicated |
|
3-Jul-14 |
|
|
Chapter Quiz for Chapters
Indicated;
DB#1 due Thursday 5PM |
|
Wk 8 |
8-Jul-14 |
Chapter 13 |
Chapter 17, 18 |
Homework for Chapters Indicated |
|
10-Jul-14 |
|
|
Chapter Quiz for Chapters
Indicated;
TEST#3 Due Thursday 5PM |
|
|
|
|
|
July 11 = last day of classes |
|
|
|
|
ALL ASSIGNMENTS ARE DUE AT 5PM ON
THE DATE INDICATED |
|
|
|
Midterm Date: |
ECON MIDTERM: |
|
|
|
Tuesday, June 17, 2014 |
There is not a Midterm Exam for
this Course |
|
|
|
Final Exam Dates: |
ECON FINAL: |
|
|
|
July 14-15, 2014 |
There is not a Final Exam for this
Course |
|
|
|
|
However, Test #3 is weighted
heavier than Test #1 and #2 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
HOLIDAY'S: |
|
|
|
|
|
Mon May 26: Memorial Day |
|
|
|
|
Thurs July 4: Independence Day |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Grades entered by Midnight July 17 |
GRU AND HULL COLLEGE OF BUSINESS
POLICIES
Class Attendance:
If the student has been absent for more than
the equivalent of 10 percent of class time, regardless of cause, then the
professor may withdraw the student from the class for excessive absences. It
is important to note that the instructor may—or may not—withdraw a student
from class based upon attendance. In any case, a student should not assume
that the instructor has initiated the withdrawal form. A student not
withdrawn from a course who stops attending class (or who never attends
class) is subject to receiving a grade of WF or F for the course. Please
reference the Class Attendance Section in GRU Catalog for
further details.
“Each student is expected to attend class
regularly, to arrive on time, and to remain until class is dismissed.
Tardiness and leaving class early are disruptive for other students and the
faculty and are behaviors that are not acceptable in a classroom or business
setting. Students who do not arrive promptly or leave early may be noted
as absent, at the faculty member’s discretion. Absences in excess of the
maximum prescribed in the course syllabus may result in the faculty member’s
withdrawing the student from the course.” HCB Professional Behavior
Guidelines
Code of Conduct:
Please review the Student Code of
Conduct in the Jaguar Student Handbook. It outlines your
responsibilities as students and those of a faculty member to maintain the
integrity of the learning environment. As outlined in the handbook,
disorderly or distracting conduct may result in expulsion from the class.
Moreover, any form of academic dishonesty will not be tolerated. Should you
be caught cheating or plagiarizing the work of another the procedures as
outlined in the handbook and catalog will be followed.
“The classroom should be considered a
place of business - academic business. Distracting behavior such as
uninvited casual talk among students, use of cell phones and beepers,
sleeping, or inappropriate behavior toward fellow students or faculty will
not be tolerated any more than they would be in a business setting. Faculty
have the right and the responsibility to maintain a classroom free of such
distractions. Students who persist in such behavior may be asked to leave
the class and may be counted absent for the session. Persistent disruptive
behavior may result in the faculty member’s withdrawing the student from the
course.” HCB Professional Behavior Guidelines
Academic Honesty:
In an academic community, honesty and
integrity must prevail if the work done and the honors awarded are to
receive their respect. The erosion of honesty is the academic community’s
ultimate loss. The responsibility for the practice and preservation of
honesty must be equally assumed by all of its members. Any type of
dishonesty in securing those credentials therefore invites serious
sanctions, up to and including, a WF in the course, and expulsion from the
institution. Examples of dishonesty include actual or attempted cheating,
plagiarism, or knowingly furnishing false information to any university
employee. Please reference the Academic Honesty Section in GRU Catalog
for further details and specific definitions of cheating and plagiarism.
“Unethical behavior of students in any form
is not acceptable and will not be tolerated in the Hull College of Business.
Academic dishonesty ( see definitions in the following sections) -
cheating on exams, plagiarism of the work of others, unapproved
collaboration on graded work, and the like - will be dealt with immediately
and with clear consequences. Depending on the nature and severity of the
problem, a student who is guilty of any such violation may be: 1) withdrawn
from the course with a grade of WF (counted as an F in the GPA); 2) given a
grade of zero on the assignment; 3) given a grade of F in the course; or 4)
otherwise penalized, at the discretion of the faculty member. Two
occurrences of a WF grade for academic dishonesty will result in a student’s
being expelled from the University, per current University policy as
described in the University Catalog.” HCB Professional Behavior Guidelines
Disabilities:
Students with disabilities must contact the
Office of Testing and Disability Services (706-737-1469) before
the start of the semester. If you require special accommodation, the office
will send a classroom accommodation form to affected faculty. Should you
require special accommodations, please contact me at the beginning
of the semester to determine how they will be implemented. Please reference
the Testing and Disability Section in GRU Catalog for further
details.
GUIDELINES FOR STUDENT PROFESSIONAL
BEHAVIOR
IN THE HULL COLLEGE OF BUSINESS
The Hull College of Business faculty and
administration believe that, for students to be prepared for career success,
it is important for them not only to know the subject matter in their
majors, but also to demonstrate professional, ethical, and responsible
business and social behavior. Whether a person is interviewing for a job, participating in a
business or academic social event, or attending class, there are some
important characteristics of personal behavior that are expected by
colleagues and administrators. In the business work environment, employees
can be dismissed for behavior that is distracting or disruptive to other
employees, customers, or administrators.
In keeping with these expectations and to
protect the welfare of all students, the faculty and administration of the
College have agreed on the following guidelines, beyond those specified in
the Student Code of Conduct in the Jaguar Handbook, for appropriate
behavior of students in our programs or attending classes in the College.
None of these guidelines is intended to limit normal freedom of speech or
expression in any way.
Class Attendance
Each student is expected to attend class
regularly, to arrive on time, and to remain until class is dismissed.
Tardiness and leaving class early are disruptive for other students and the
faculty and are behaviors that are not acceptable in a classroom or business
setting. Students who do not arrive promptly or leave early may be noted
as absent, at the faculty member’s discretion. Absences in excess of the
maximum prescribed in the course syllabus may result in the faculty member
withdrawing the student from the course.
Other Distracting Behavior
The classroom should be considered a place of
business - academic business. Distracting behavior such as uninvited casual
talk among students, use of cell phones and beepers, sleeping, or
inappropriate behavior toward fellow students or faculty will not be
tolerated any more than they would be in a business setting. Faculty
have the right and the responsibility to maintain a classroom free of such
distractions. Students who persist in such behavior may be asked to
leave the class and may be counted absent for the session. Persistent
disruptive behavior may result in the faculty member’s withdrawing the
student from the course.
Academic Dishonesty TC \l1 "
Unethical behavior of students in any form is
not acceptable and will not be tolerated in the Hull College of Business.
Academic dishonesty (see definitions in the following sections) -
cheating on exams, plagiarism of the work of others, unapproved
collaboration on graded work, and the like - will be dealt with immediately
and with clear consequences. Depending on the nature and severity of
the problem, a student who is guilty of any such violation may be: 1)
withdrawn from the course with a grade of WF (counted as an F in the GPA);
2) given a grade of zero on the assignment; 3) given a grade of F in the
course; or 4) otherwise penalized, at the discretion of the faculty
member. Two occurrences of a WF grade for academic dishonesty will result
in a student’s being expelled from the University, per current University
policy as described in the University Catalog.
Student Appeals and Grievances
Any student who believes that he or she has
been treated unfairly under these guidelines should first address the matter
with the faculty member responsible for the class. If the problem is not
resolved, the student may meet with the Dean or pursue appeals or grievance
procedures outlined in the University
Catalog.
ACADEMIC DISHONESTY DEFINITIONS
HULL COLLEGE OF BUSINESS
TC \l2 "
Any attempt to present intentionally the work or knowledge of others as your
own on a graded test or assignment constitutes academic dishonesty.
The following illustrations do not include every possible variation of
academic dishonesty, but they are examples of the kinds of infractions that
will be considered academic dishonesty violations. If you have questions
about academic dishonesty, please ask any faculty member or any
administrator in the Hull College of Business. It is your responsibility to
recognize and avoid initiating or contributing to academically dishonest
behavior.
CHEATING ON A TEST, EXAM, OR ASSIGNMENT
!
Closed-book, closed-notes tests
The use of any materials except those
provided by the faculty member or provided for in test instructions is
considered cheating. The use of prepared notes, electronic aids,
assistance from others, or the use of any information obtained from others
(with or without their permission) during the test is considered cheating.
! Open-book,
open-notes tests
Assistance from others or the use of any
information obtained from others (with or without their permission) during
the test, without the permission of the instructor, is considered cheating.
! Independent
projects or papers
If the faculty member’s instructions require independent, unassisted work on
a project or paper, no portion of the assignment may be prepared by anyone
else. Having any part of the assignment prepared by someone else, or in
collaboration with someone else, is considered cheating unless the
instructor’s instructions specifically call for such collaboration.
! Assisting
others with test information
Because many courses are taught at multiple times, it is important that
students in one section of a course not provide information about a test to
any student in another section who will take the same or a similar test at a
later time. To do so will be considered cheating.
PLAGIARISM TC \l1 "
!
Failure to give credit to
others
On individual and group assignments –
projects, papers, presentations, research studies, and the like – no
portion of the work may contain quotations of or paraphrasing (rewording) of
the work of others unless each such reference is clearly identified
with an appropriate footnote or bibliographical reference to the original
source and author. To not give credit to others in each such
instance is to present the work of others as if you had written it
yourself. That is considered plagiarism. Style manuals ( such as
the American Psychological Association manual) provide guidelines for
footnoting, quotations, and other means of giving credit for the work of
others. Your instructor may prefer some particular style. If no guidelines
are provided, it is your responsibility to use a standard style or ask the
faculty member for guidance.
!
Ghost writing
It should go without saying that having someone else write
some or all of a paper or do a project for which you are individually
responsible constitutes academic dishonesty. Whether the author is a
friend, a paid writer, or a person who offers such services on a web site,
the result is an intention to present someone else’s work as your own and
will be treated as an academic dishonesty
infraction.
URL’s of Interest:
GRU Catalog
http://www.aug.edu/faculty_secretary/catalog/2009/FINAL_2009_2010_web.pdf
HCOB
http://hull.aug.edu/
Professor’s
http://hull.aug.edu/bschmidt
Pearson Lab
http://pearsonmylabandmastering.com