Olympic College | 2016-2017 Student Handbook & Planner - page 158

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enrollment at the college. Failure of the student to produce identification as required shall
subject the student to disciplinary action.
[Statutory Authority: Chapter 28B.50 RCW. WSR 15-03-078, § 132C-120-060, filed
1/16/15, effective 2/16/15; WSR 05-10-052, § 132C-120-060, filed 4/29/05, effective
5/30/05; WSR 85-13-067 (Order 24, Resolution No. 52-0585), § 132C-120-060, filed
6/18/85; WSR 80-05-004 (Order 21, Resolution No. 49-0280), § 132C-120-060, filed
4/4/80.]
WAC 132C-120-065 Prohibited student conduct.
The college may impose disciplinary sanctions against a student who commits, or aids,
abets, incites, encourages or assists another person to commit, an act(s) of misconduct,
which include, but are not limited to, the following:
(1)
Academic dishonesty.
Any act of academic dishonesty including, but not limited to,
cheating, plagiarism, and fabrication.
(a) Cheating includes any attempt to give or obtain unauthorized assistance relating to the
completion of an academic assignment.
(b) Plagiarism includes taking and using as one's own, without proper attribution, the
ideas, writings, or work of another person in completing an academic assignment.
Prohibited conduct may also include the unauthorized submission for credit of academic
work that has been submitted for credit in another course.
(c) Fabrication includes falsifying data, information, or citations in completing an
academic assignment and also includes providing false or deceptive information to an
instructor concerning the completion of an assignment.
(2)
Other dishonesty.
Any other acts of dishonesty. Such acts include, but are not
limited to:
(a) Forgery, alteration, submission of falsified documents or misuse of any college
document, record, or instrument of identification;
(b) Tampering with an election conducted by or for college students; or
(c) Furnishing false information, or failing to furnish correct information, in response to
the request or requirement of a college officer or employee.
(3)
Obstruction or disruption.
Obstruction or disruption of:
(a) Any instruction, research, administration, disciplinary proceeding, or other college
activity, including the obstruction of the free flow of pedestrian or vehicular movement
on college property or at a college activity; or
(b) Any activity that is authorized to occur on college property, whether or not actually
conducted or sponsored by the college.
(4)
Assault, abuse, threats, intimidation, harassment and stalking.
Assault, physical
abuse, verbal abuse, threat(s), intimidation, harassment, bullying, stalking, or other
conduct which harms, threatens, or is reasonably perceived as threatening the health or
safety of another person or another person's property. For purposes of this subsection:
(a) Bullying is severe, persistent, or pervasive physical or verbal abuse and involving a
power imbalance between the aggressor and victim.
(b) Stalking is intentional and repeated following of another person, which places that
person in reasonable fear that the perpetrator intends to injure, intimidate or harass that
person. Stalking also includes instances where the perpetrator knows or reasonably
should know that the person is frightened, intimidated or harassed, even if the perpetrator
lacks such an intent.
(5)
Cyber misconduct.
Cyberstalking, cyberbullying or online harassment. Use of
electronic communications, including, but not limited to, electronic mail, instant
messaging, electronic bulletin boards, and social media sites, to harass, abuse, bully or
engage in other conduct which harms, threatens, or is reasonably perceived as threatening
the health or safety of another person. Prohibited activities include, but are not limited to,
unauthorized monitoring of another's e-mail communications directly or through
spyware, sending threatening e-mails, disrupting electronic communications with spam or
by sending a computer virus, sending false messages to third parties using another's e-
mail identity, nonconsensual recording of sexual activity, and nonconsensual distribution
of a recording of sexual activity.
(6)
Property violation.
Damage to, or theft or misuse of, real or personal property or
money of:
(a) The college or state;
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