Communication01

Subdecks (3)

Cards (109)

  • This is the pursuit of intellectual engagement in an open, truthful, and responsible
    behavior.
    ACADEMIC INTEGRITY
  • Whether taking a quiz, a long exam,
    summative evaluation, written or oral reports,
    laboratory exercises, term papers, and
    problem sets, it is necessary to avoid the
    following forms
    ACADEMIC DISHONESTY
  • What are the FORMS OF ACADEMIC DISHONESTY?
    Cheating, Plagiarism, Fabrication, Obtaining an unfair advantage, Supporting academic dishonesty, Misrepresentation of records, Illegal access to academic or administrative records
  • the use of unauthorized notes, study aids, or information
    during examinations
    Cheating
  • includes the act of changing a graded work after it has
    been returned, then submitting the output for
    reassessment;
    Cheating
  • submission of similar outputs for credit in more than one
    subject without prior consent from the teachers.
    Cheating
  • It is the practice of taking credit for someone else's words or
    ideas. It's an act of intellectual dishonesty.
    Plagiarism
  • • passing of a class requirement with ideas in part or whole
    not entirely one’s work without citing the correct source
    • purchase of papers or have someone write for someone
    Plagiarism
  • inventing or falsifying an information, data, or citation

    Fabrication
  • e.g. a student just randomly written the figures in his/her
    data presentations without going through the datagathering stage of research paper writing.
    Fabrication
  • • a student finds ways to place himself in a more
    advantageous position over his/her classmates
    Obtaining an unfair advantage
  • one may do stealing examination materials, hiding
    library resources with the intention of depriving others of
    their use, submission of one’s work in previous class to
    another class, and unauthorized collaboration in
    accomplishing a task
    Obtaining an unfair advantage
  • distribution of academic materials or providing
    assistance to others with the intention of violating any
    forms of academic dishonesty
    Supporting academic dishonesty
  • the act of unlawful modification of school records such as
    the forging of signatures of school officials, falsification
    of documents such as diploma, transcript of records, and
    other documents
    Misrepresentation of records
  • unauthorized viewing of school records, changing
    computer systems, and disseminating information
    gained via illegal access
    Illegal access to academic or administrative records
  • formal communication documents used to pass information from one company to another or from a company to its clients, employees, and other stakeholders.
    Business letters
  • Importance of Business Letters • Sending business information • Developing and keeping business partnerships • Market Creation • Cost and time saving • Maintaining confidentiality • Formal agreement • Transactional settlement • Selling Incentive SalesDeveloping Business Relationships
  • Business Letter writing includes the following:

    Kinds of business letters • Memorandum • Minutes of the meeting • Business/project proposal • Incident report • And other forms
  • Kinds of Business letters
    Request letter
    Cover letter for job application
    Sales letter
    Claim and Adjustment letter
    Collection letter
    Endorsement letter
    • Letter of Intent
    • Letter of Recommendation
    • Letter of Resignation
  • a form of official interdepartmental communication that is used to convey essential decisions or information.
    memorandum
  • It is essentially an intra-office tool for communication usable to announce specific events or changes.
    memorandum
  • Purposes of a memorandum
    • A way to transfer knowledge of a specific process
    • To convey specific details on a project
    • To request specific information
    • To offer suggestions on a matter
    • To report to a superior
    • To offer congratulations or positive news
    • To share ideas
  • abbreviation MoM, protocols, or, informally, notes, are the instant written record of a meeting or hearing. They typically describe the events of the meeting and may include a list of attendees, a statement of the activities considered by the participants, and related responses or decisions for the activities.

    Minutes also known as minutes of meetings
  • a project management document that’s used to define the objectives and requirements of a project. It helps organizations and external project stakeholders agree on an initial project planning frameworkproject proposal
  • is a tool that documents any event that may or may not have caused injuries to a person or damage to a company asset. It is used to capture injuries and accidents, near misses, property and equipment damage, health and safety issues, security breaches, and misconduct on the work site.
    incident report