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Krienert, Jessie L.; Walsh, Jeffrey A.; Cannon, Kevin D. – College Teaching, 2022
Academic dishonesty is pervasive among college students throughout the country. Current research suggests that more than half of students report engaging in cheating behavior while in college. While traditional forms of cheating behavior remain, technology has ushered in new opportunities making cheating more accessible by more students and harder…
Descriptors: Cheating, Student Behavior, Ethics, Achievement Need
Kiviniemi, Marc T. – College Teaching, 2015
This paper discusses the rationale of implementing an "academic dishonesty equals F policy." The author asserts that faculty must take seriously those things which students are expected to take seriously. Integrity--academic, personal, and professional--is worth taking seriously. He goes on to provide three rationales to justify this…
Descriptors: Cheating, Academic Failure, Grades (Scholastic), Educational Policy
Malesky, L. Alvin, Jr.; Baley, John; Crow, Robert – College Teaching, 2016
Academic dishonesty has evolved to keep pace with changes in higher education. Websites now advertise the service of taking online courses for students. This study examined one such online company. Representatives from the company were professional and delivered the advertised services. Two experienced faculty members who co-taught the course used…
Descriptors: Ethics, Cheating, Online Courses, Online Vendors
Culver, Tiffany F. – College Teaching, 2014
After receiving notification from administration that faculty could enroll in six semester hours cost-free, Tiffany F. Culver began to consider taking classes. Once she had enrolled in a master's-level counseling course, she soon discovered that she was totally lacking in the student experience as she navigated through frustrating advances in…
Descriptors: Reentry Students, Continuing Education, Student Attitudes, Adult Students
Nath, Leda; Lovaglia, Michael – College Teaching, 2009
Academic dishonesty is unethical. Exam cheating is viewed as more serious than most other forms (Pincus and Schmelkin 2003). The authors review the general cheating problem, introduce a program to conservatively identify likely cheaters on multiple-choice exams, and offer a procedure for handling likely cheaters. Feedback from students who confess…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Cheating, Multiple Choice Tests, Student Attitudes
Edwards, Nelta M. – College Teaching, 2007
This article analyzes a social statistics class that engaged in self-grading. Students liked self-grading because they identified their own mistakes, it reinforced what they learned, and they received immediate feedback. Some students worried that others would cheat, but this assertion was not confirmed in the data and the possibility of cheating…
Descriptors: Statistics, Grades (Scholastic), Grading, Self Evaluation (Individuals)
Hutton, Patricia A. – College Teaching, 2006
This article reviews the empirical evidence on college student cheating and places it in a context that combines economic theories of benefit/cost analysis and unobservable behavior with social network analysis of how widespread rule breaking can develop in an organization. The implications are that students cheat because the benefit/cost…
Descriptors: Cheating, College Students, Social Networks, Social Influences