CCC/CCE Technical Paper Submittal
The AACE Headquarters Certification Staff and the Certification Board are committed to offering a quality exam product by
improving the overall Certification process, as well as the ability to release exam results faster.
In order to accomplish these goals, the Certification Board has changed the deadline for submitting the Technical Paper required with the CCC/CCE certification.
The submittal of the Technical Paper now coincides with the registration deadline date as posted on the website. Candidates failing to submit the Technical Paper by the registration deadline will not be permitted to sit for the CCC/CCE exam.
This new process for the CCC/CCE Technical Paper submittal is in effect for the following 2010 exam dates:
Jun 4, 2010 Exam Registration Deadline is April 27, 2010
Jun 26, 2010 Exam Registration Deadline is May 11, 2010
Jul 8, 2010 Exam Registration Deadline is May 11, 2010
Jul 10, 2010 Exam Registration Deadline is May 11, 2010
Nov 4, 2010 Exam Registration Deadline is September 6, 2010
Nov 6, 2010 Exam Registration Deadline is September 6, 2010
Dec 3, 2010 Exam Registration Deadline is September 6, 2010
The requirements due by exam registration deadline are as follows:
Technical Paper for CCC/CCE certification
Certification Application
Education &/or Employment Verification
Registration/Payment
All certification requirements, including the Technical Paper, should be sent to certificationsubmittals@aacei.org
Once submittal of all requirements is verified, candidates will be issued a confirmation via email.
As early as high school and in college, English teachers and professors taught that plagiarism was wrong and every time it was discovered our scores were reduced often resulting in a failing grade. In the workplace, deadlines have to be met; and work must be completed on time, which causes many to toss aside what was taught to do what ever it takes to complete the assignment.
This is often accepted by our employer because we all work in the same group; help one another when ever possible, share thoughts and ideas, etc. However, when asked to write, for example, a white paper and collaborate with a colleague, that colleague may or may not be given credit for his/her thoughts, ideas, and efforts.
When faced with the challenge of writing a paper that is not directly related to the present work assignment or project, the habits formed at the office are not acceptable for a published work product. The AACE International (AACE) certification paper often will become a published document.
The AACE Certification Board is using the following definition of plagiarism as provided by academia. It occurs when an author:
In order to accomplish these goals, the Certification Board has changed the deadline for submitting the Technical Paper required with the CCC/CCE certification.
The submittal of the Technical Paper now coincides with the registration deadline date as posted on the website. Candidates failing to submit the Technical Paper by the registration deadline will not be permitted to sit for the CCC/CCE exam.
This new process for the CCC/CCE Technical Paper submittal is in effect for the following 2010 exam dates:
Jun 4, 2010 Exam Registration Deadline is April 27, 2010
Jun 26, 2010 Exam Registration Deadline is May 11, 2010
Jul 8, 2010 Exam Registration Deadline is May 11, 2010
Jul 10, 2010 Exam Registration Deadline is May 11, 2010
Nov 4, 2010 Exam Registration Deadline is September 6, 2010
Nov 6, 2010 Exam Registration Deadline is September 6, 2010
Dec 3, 2010 Exam Registration Deadline is September 6, 2010
The requirements due by exam registration deadline are as follows:
Technical Paper for CCC/CCE certification
Certification Application
Education &/or Employment Verification
Registration/Payment
All certification requirements, including the Technical Paper, should be sent to certificationsubmittals@aacei.org
Once submittal of all requirements is verified, candidates will be issued a confirmation via email.
The Certification Paper and Plagiarism
The Georgetown University website, one of many sources that defines plagiarism, states that Plagiarism is "the act of passing off as one's own the ideas or writings of another." In the Appendix to the Honor Council pamphlet c alled "Acknowledging the Work of Others" (which is used by permission of Cornell University), three simple conventions are presented for when you must provide a reference:- If you use someone else's ideas, you should cite the source
- If the way in which you are using the source is unclear, make it clear
- If you received specific help from someone in writing the paper, acknowledge it
As early as high school and in college, English teachers and professors taught that plagiarism was wrong and every time it was discovered our scores were reduced often resulting in a failing grade. In the workplace, deadlines have to be met; and work must be completed on time, which causes many to toss aside what was taught to do what ever it takes to complete the assignment.
This is often accepted by our employer because we all work in the same group; help one another when ever possible, share thoughts and ideas, etc. However, when asked to write, for example, a white paper and collaborate with a colleague, that colleague may or may not be given credit for his/her thoughts, ideas, and efforts.
When faced with the challenge of writing a paper that is not directly related to the present work assignment or project, the habits formed at the office are not acceptable for a published work product. The AACE International (AACE) certification paper often will become a published document.
The AACE Certification Board is using the following definition of plagiarism as provided by academia. It occurs when an author:
- Quotes another without using a footnote (or other reference)
- Quotes another without enclosing the author's words in quotation marks, even if you give credit.
- Fails to use your own words and sentence structure in paraphrasing.
- Uses the ideas expressed by others, without giving credit, even if you don't quote the original source.
