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Rick Somers; Sam Cunningham; Sarah Dart; Sheona Thomson; Caslon Chua; Edmund Pickering – IEEE Transactions on Learning Technologies, 2024
Academic misconduct stemming from file-sharing websites is an increasingly prevalent challenge in tertiary education, including information technology and engineering disciplines. Current plagiarism detection methods (e.g., text matching) are largely ineffective for combatting misconduct in programming and mathematics-based assessments. For these…
Descriptors: Assignments, Automation, Identification, Technology Uses in Education
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Hall, Susan E. – Business Communication Quarterly, 2011
Plagiarism can be "plaguing" if it is not discussed, understood, and enforced by the professor right at the beginning of the course and throughout the semester. Students usually don't "have" to cheat or plagiarize; they do so mainly because "they can." Professors who turn a deaf ear or a blind eye to students who plagiarize create deleterious…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, Cheating, Ethics, Student Behavior
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Davis, Lajuan – Business Communication Quarterly, 2011
Managing student plagiarism can cause instructors to feel as if they are serving educational institutions in the role of investigator rather than educator. Since many educators continue to struggle with the issue of student plagiarism, the author interviewed some of her colleagues. In this article, she shares her and her colleagues' antiplagiarism…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, Teacher Expectations of Students, Classroom Techniques, Teaching Methods
Johnston, Howard – Education Partnerships, Inc., 2007
"According to the Josephson Institute's 2006 Report Card on the Ethics of American Youth, today's young people reveal deeply entrenched habits of dishonesty. The report, released as part of National CHARACTER COUNTS! Week (October 15-21) reveals high rates of cheating, lying and theft. Cheating in school continues to be rampant. A substantial…
Descriptors: Cheating, Ethics, Assignments, Student Behavior
Johnson, Doug – Phi Delta Kappan, 2004
Mr. Johnson has discovered that the higher the level of student engagement and creativity, the lower the probability of plagiarism. For teachers who would like to see such desirable results, he describes the characteristics of assignments that are most likely to produce them. Two scenarios of types of assignments that avoid plagiarism are…
Descriptors: Assignments, Plagiarism, Student Participation, Cheating