Suppose now that you are instructor at large state university. You make strong effort to get to know students and are relatively successful in this. One day you are giving in-class exam and, much to your distress, you see one of our students cheating. He is very bright and is one of students who has come to office many times to explain course material. You know from one conversation with him that his father currently died and that he has had some difficulty concentrating on his schoolwork since then. When you see him cheating, you find that you could interrupt him in exam, but you decide not to do so as this would humiliate him in front of classmates. You could confront him after exam, fail him for test, and let matter go at that. University, though, has firm policy on how cases of cheating are to be handled. Policy needs that all cases of cheating are to be reported by faculty to administration. Faculty are expressly forbidden to use their own discretion in any case of cheating. Administration is highly intolerant of cheating and first offenses result in suspension for semester. Second offenses result in expulsion. What must you do? On basis of what considerations must you make decision? Roommate What, precisely, is the moral issue?