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After yоu hаve reаd the fоllоwing, pleаse sign your name. Below is what constitutes plagiarism. Just so you all know I do have accounts with Course Hero and have downloaded ChatGPT detector software such GPTZero and Writer. If I detect your work does not contain personal reflection and does not support itself with a Works Cited page, I will run your discussion and writing assignment through these software platforms. If it is not work written by you or has been copied and pasted onto a Word doc and submitted as something you wrote, you will automatically be deemed in violation of academic dishonesty and the following will happen full stop. You will receive a zero for your first offense. You will be warned not to do it again. Second offense is an automatic failure of course and you will be reported to FDTC and to your high school if you are Dual Enrolled. This goes for your exams as well. My personal advice to everyone - write original work. I understand you need to reference material because you are learning. However, you are to submit your reflection of such work, not submitting it as your own. Do not plagiarize. It is so not worth it. ACADEMIC HONESTY & PLAGIARISM Plagiarism is stealing another person's words or ideas and passing them off as your own. When you put your name on a paper in a Humanities Course at FDTC, you are claiming ownership of that paper. You are saying, "I wrote this paper and the words and ideas in it are my own, except where I have credited my sources through proper MLA documentation." Writing intensive courses aim to foster human creativity and originality and to focus on the steps of the writing process as a means to polish our finished products. The use of AI (like ChatGPT and other large language models) takes away your opportunity to share your unique voices, thoughts, and perspectives – and to work through the writing process authentically. Because of that, you are not permitted to use artificial intelligence engines, software, or other programs to create content for this course unless I have specifically given permission on a particular assignment or part of an assignment. When/if you do have my permission, I will take the time to go over in more detail the appropriate ways in which these resources can be used in your work and how to cite them. Any use outside of explicit permission constitutes a violation of the college's academic integrity policy. Additionally, we must all be aware of the ethical issues related to privacy and copyright laws any time we consider AI use. For instance, you do not have permission to enter any course content created by your instructor, content from your textbook publisher, or work created by your classmates into an AI language model and/or AI software because you do not have their permission to share or distribute this content to another source. This policy is subject to updates and revisions as the field of AI evolves and new ethical concerns emerge. Global plagiarism involves copying an entire paper from another source, perhaps by borrowing a paper someone else wrote or downloading one from an Internet site. This type of plagiarism, even on a rough draft, you will receive a zero on that assignment and an "F" in the course. We will also file information about this in your official student record. Sometimes students commit this type of plagiarism because they have waited until the last minute to do an assignment and they panic. However, you would be much better off dropping the course than earning an "F" because of plagiarism. Cut and paste plagiarism, also called patchwork plagiarism, is no more ethical than global plagiarism. This type occurs when the writer cuts and pastes words, paragraphs, and even pages from different sources to create a whole paper which he or she then turns in as his or her own work. The student may have written an introduction, conclusion, or even a few transitions, but copied the rest of the paper word for word from different sources. Committing cut and paste plagiarism, even on the rough draft, will also result in a zero on that assignment and an "F" in the course. Incremental plagiarism can sometimes happen through carelessness or by accident. It occurs when you write most of the words yourself, but do not properly cite or credit your sources or do not paraphrase or quote correctly. If you are in an on-line course, carefully read the assignments that cover plagiarism and correct documentation. If you are submitting a draft and your instructor discovers incremental plagiarism, you will be asked to redo your paper. If you are submitting a final draft, you will receive an "F" on that assignment. Remember, you are responsible for the integrity of your work. If you are not confident about your writing ability, your instructor and the tutors in the Academic Skills Lab are there to help you. We as the Humanities Department are committed to the idea that writing is a process and that we all make mistakes and can learn from these mistakes. We allow submission of rough and final drafts to help you grow and learn as a writer. How can we help you if the words and ideas you turn in are not your own? Please do not put us in the position of having you fail one of our courses because of plagiarism. The experience will not be pleasant for any of us.
Explаin the significаnce оf peptidоglycаn in bacterial cell walls and its relatiоn to Gram-positive and Gram-negative staining.