Academic integrity refers to maintaining a standard of honest and ethical behavior in all types of academic work. This includes things like not cheating on exams or turning in a term paper that you didn't write yourself. It also includes plagiarism, or not giving proper credit to the ideas or work of sources that were created by others and not yourself. All students are subject to MJC's Academic Freedom & Integrity Policy.
AI has complicated the concept of academic integrity. Some rationalize that “everybody uses AI,” or “AI is just like any other technology tool.”
Be faithful to this principle: the work you turn in must be authentically yours. Copying AI-produced content verbatim and representing it as your own without attribution is cheating.
Cheating with AI deprives you of the opportunity to develop your own skills and intellectual confidence. Your personal development requires you to do the hard work of learning.
If your professor says no use of AI in their class, or on individual assignments, follow the rules. Remember that the rules may vary on certain assignments. In some cases, you may even be required to use AI. To avoid crossing the cheating “red line,” ask for specific instructions on the use of AI on each assignment.
Some assignments will permit or even require the use of AI. In these cases, keep these basic principles in mind:
Academic honesty requires that you cite (attribute) the original source of all materials that are not your own. This transparency allows others to understand where information comes from and evaluate its credibility. Plagiarism, a failure to properly attribute sources, is a serious breach of academic integrity.
Follow instructions from your professors on how to cite the use of AI in an assignment. The rules may vary from class to class. The standards for AI attribution continue to evolve as new AI tools emerge and higher education adapts.
When you explain how AI was used in your work, specify these four elements:
If you are allowed to use AI in an academic assignment, here are some guidelines for citing.
Your instructor may also ask for an appendix that includes the prompts that you provided to your AI tool or the full transcript of your interaction.
See also this summary of ways to acknowledge use of generative AI: Acknowledging and Citing Generative AI in Academic Work from the book Write What Matters!
It's also worth reading this advice by Dr. Kristin Terrill of Iowa State University, since some uses don't fit the standard way of citing:
This guide is based "The 2025 Student Guide to Artificial Intelligence" by Imagining the Digital Future, Elon University and American Association of Colleges and Universities is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.