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Gravett, Karen; Kinchin, Ian M. – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2021
This article examines teachers' perspectives on a neglected area of practice: academic referencing. Commonly considered a simple skill to learn, we suggest that instead a study of referencing practices enables us to glean valuable insight into the challenges experienced by students when developing a learner identity. Drawing on interviews with…
Descriptors: Citations (References), Self Concept, Student Development, Student Experience
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Laily, Nujmatul; Ermayda, Ria Zulkha; Azzardina, Aulia – Journal of Education and Learning (EduLearn), 2021
The stages in an individual's moral development will determine how an individual will behave. Kohlberg divides moral development into three stages, namely pre-conventional, conventional and post-conventional. However, the stages of individual moral development may vary. These different levels of moral development will influence individuals'…
Descriptors: Student Development, Moral Development, Personality Traits, Cheating
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Cutri, Jennifer; Abraham, Amarpreet; Karlina, Yeni; Patel, Sweta Vijaykumar; Moharami, Mehdi; Zeng, Shaoru; Manzari, Elham; Pretorius, Lynette – International Journal for Educational Integrity, 2021
This conceptual review seeks to reframe the view of academic integrity as something to be enforced to an academic skill that needs to be developed. The authors highlight how practices within academia create an environment where feelings of inadequacy thrive, leading to behaviours of unintentional academic misconduct. Importantly, this review…
Descriptors: Integrity, Cheating, Doctoral Programs, Self Concept
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Chugh, Ritesh; Luck, Jo-Anne; Turnbull, Darren; Pember, Edward Rytas – Journal of Academic Ethics, 2021
The increased incidences of academic misconduct in universities are compromising the reputation of higher education in Australia and increasing the work of academics responsible for the delivery of quality learning outcomes to students. Confronted with increasing instances of academic dishonesty in university classrooms, universities play a…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Part Time Faculty, Teacher Education, Integrity
Hill, Guzyal; Mason, Jon; Dunn, Alex – Research and Practice in Technology Enhanced Learning, 2021
Due to COVID-19, universities with limited expertise with the digital environment had to rapidly transition to online teaching and assessment. This transition did not create a new problem but has offered more opportunities for contract cheating and diversified the types of such services. While universities and lecturers were adjusting to the new…
Descriptors: Contracts, Outsourcing, Cheating, Computer Assisted Testing
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Carlin, Matthew – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
There is a growing concern today with the state of ethics in higher education as it relates to everything from increasing corporate influence and widespread use of questionable research methods, to cheating and plagiarism committed by students and faculty alike. Multiple studies, from a variety of disciplinary backgrounds, have recently approached…
Descriptors: Ethics, Higher Education, Cheating, Plagiarism
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Adama, Esther Abena; Graf, Amanda; Adusei-Asante, Kwadwo; Afrifa-Yamoah, Ebenezer – International Journal for Educational Integrity, 2023
Background: COVID-19 and its associated restrictions called for innovations in higher education teaching and learning space with many universities resorting to online teaching and alternative assessments. However, little has been done to understand the academic integrity implications in alternative online and non-invigilated assessments. Aim: This…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Alternative Assessment, Integrity
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Dremova, Oksana; Maloshonok, Natalia; Terentev, Evgeniy; Federiakin, Denis – European Journal of Higher Education, 2023
Despite university efforts to create honour codes and a culture of integrity, student academic dishonesty remains a widespread problem around the world. Previous theoretical and methodological approaches, which informed the development of measures for the prevention of dishonest behaviour, focus only on student justifications of academic…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Integrity, Cheating, Plagiarism
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Cynthia S. Deale; Seung-Hyun Lee – International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2023
Those involved in higher education have been concerned about students' academic dishonesty for many years and there are concerns that the coronavirus pandemic led to even more academic dishonesty across the disciplines. Therefore, this study focused on hospitality and tourism students' views on academic dishonesty, or cheating behaviors, before…
Descriptors: Hospitality Occupations, Tourism, Ethics, Integrity
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Stacy Boyer-Davis; Kevin Berry; Amy Cooper – International Journal for Business Education, 2023
This research study investigated the relationship between technostress creators (techno-complexity, techno-insecurity, techno-invasion, techno-overload, and techno-uncertainty) and faculty perceptions of student cheating in online classes. Data were collected from faculty members of the Management and Organizational Behavior Teaching Society…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Business Education, Computer Use, Technology
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Wenzel, Kristin; Reinhard, Marc-André – Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal, 2020
Desirable difficulties like tests were often shown to increase long-term learning. However, due to the complexity and difficulty of such tasks, they are also argued to result in negative consequences like stress, anxiety, pressure, frustration, or negative evaluations. In other studies, such consequences were, in turn, often found to increase…
Descriptors: Tests, Cheating, Stress Variables, Difficulty Level
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Birks, Melanie; Mills, Jane; Allen, Steph; Tee, Stephen – International Journal for Educational Integrity, 2020
Academic misconduct is a problem of growing concern across the tertiary education sector. While plagiarism has been the most common form of academic misconduct, the advent of software programs to detect plagiarism has seen the problem of misconduct simply mutate. As universities attempt to function in an increasingly complex environment, the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Cheating, Plagiarism
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Lancaster, Thomas – Journal of Academic Ethics, 2020
Contract cheating services are marketing to students at discipline level, using increasingly sophisticated techniques. The discipline level reach of these services has not been widely considered in the academic integrity literature. Much of the academic understanding of contract cheating is not discipline specific, but the necessary solutions to…
Descriptors: Cheating, Intellectual Disciplines, Higher Education, Foreign Countries
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Phillip Dawson; Kelli Nicola-Richmond; Helen Partridge – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2024
Educators set restrictions in examinations to enable them to assess learning outcomes under particular conditions. The open book versus closed book binary is an example of the sorts of restrictions examiners have traditionally set. In the late 2000s this was expanded to a trinary to include open web examinations. However, the current technology…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Computer Assisted Testing, Supervision, Cheating
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Li Zhao; Junjie Peng; Xinchen Yang; Weihao Yan; Shiqi Ke; Kanza Batool; Yaxin Li; Kang Lee – Studies in Higher Education, 2024
Academic cheating is a pervasive problem in many universities globally. The present double-blind randomized controlled field experiment tested whether reminding university students about academic dishonesty sanction policies would reduce their cheating in an actual exam. Students were assigned to either a Sanction Reminder or a No Reminder…
Descriptors: Cheating, Ethics, Discipline Problems, Discipline Policy
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