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“Anyone who knows anything of history knows that great social changes are impossible without feminine upheaval. Revolutions are the locomotives of history.”

Karl Marx

Plagiarism and the Honor Code

As a graduate student in history at NCSU, you are a member of an adademic community that expects you to conduct yourself according to its standards for academic integrity.  The University's expectations for students are spelled out in NCSU's Code of Student Conduct, particularly in Paragraphs 7-13 that define Academic Integrity and its violations. 

We encourage you to talk to your instructors as well as to consult  the Code of Student Conduct and the materials and links that we provide here.  This information will clarify what constitutes violations of academic integrity standards, in particular what constitutes plagiarism.  It will also help you avoid unintended violations.

What Students
Are Saying

Choosing North Carolina State University as the place to study public history was easy.  This is an interdiscplinary program that hones scholarship and technical knowledge, rather than emphasizing one at the expense of the other.

Carolyn Chesarino
BA in History, John Carroll University, Cleveland
MA candiate in Public History (Archives)

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350 Withers Hall, Campus Box 8108, Raleigh, NC 27695-8108
Phone: 919.515.2483 Fax: 919.515.3886
Email:

College of Humanities and Social Sciences, Department of History