academic_integrity
The University of Arkansas Libraries AI and Academic Integrity guide says students must receive instructor permission in advance before using generative AI technology to complete academic work.
Change log
Release-to-release tracker diff with separate policy-text, newly-extracted claim, evidence, and source snapshot categories.
Current public record freshness and review state.
University of Arkansas Fayetteville currently has 6 source-backed claim records and 3 official source attributions. Latest tracked changed date: May 23, 2026. Latest tracker diff: 0 comparable policy-text changes, 6 newly extracted claims, 0 source snapshot changes.
This tracker is not legal advice, not academic integrity advice, and not an official university statement unless a linked source is the university's own official page.
Newly extracted claims are tracker additions and are not necessarily newly published by the university. Source snapshot changes show hash changes for the same source URL and are not by themselves policy changes.
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Unified tracker diff generated from the previous and current public release snapshots.
Comparing public-release-20260526-001 to public-release-20260526-003.
6 claim records
The University of Arkansas Libraries AI and Academic Integrity guide says students must receive instructor permission in advance before using generative AI technology to complete academic work.
The University of Arkansas Academic Initiatives and Integrity faculty resources page says faculty have discretion over student use of generative AI in their courses and provides approved syllabus statement options for prohibited, restricted, and unrestricted use.
A January 2026 University of Arkansas advisory lists Copilot Chat, Copilot for Microsoft 365, OpenAI ChatGPT Edu, Google Gemini, and Google NotebookLM as approved AI tools available for campus use, with some tools requiring licenses.
The University of Arkansas Libraries AI and Academic Integrity guide says students are expected to cite anything that is not their original work, including text generated by artificial intelligence.
A January 2026 University of Arkansas campus advisory says employees and students must adhere to the university's acceptable-use guidelines for artificial intelligence, covering ethical and responsible use, teaching and learning, research, and allowable AI tools.
The University of Arkansas advisory says employees or students who want to use an AI tool that is not approved need to complete a tool exception request form.
3 source attributions
official_guidance Tracker checked at May 23, 2026, 4:12 AM
official_guidance Tracker checked at May 23, 2026, 4:11 AM
official_guidance Tracker checked at May 23, 2026, 4:11 AM