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McCoy, Brian – Liberal Education, 2021
When faced with pervasive--and increasingly creative--forms of plagiarism and cheating, what should faculty members do? Give in? Give up? Or should they consider the classic break-up line "It's not you--it's me" and make changes in the ways they assess student learning? If faculty truly wish to increase student success and decrease acts…
Descriptors: Cheating, Plagiarism, Teacher Role, Teaching Methods
Puka, Bill – Liberal Education, 2005
Most faculty and administrators rate academic dishonesty a high crime, fatal to education. What cheating shows that merits strong opposition is a student's pride in deceptively "getting over" on professors and "the system," even where both are recognized as fair. This affection for injustice and casual disregard for honest dealings must be trained…
Descriptors: Ethics, College Students, Trust (Psychology), Integrity
Willen, Matthew S. – Liberal Education, 2004
If frequiency of e-mail distribution is any indication, college professors and administrators indeed took notice of last fall's article in the New York Times, "A Campus Fad That's Being Copied: Internet Plagiarism" (Rimer 2003), on Rutgers Professor Donald L. McCabe's recent study of cheating in college and universities. Four copies of the…
Descriptors: Internet, Writing (Composition), Copyrights, Educational Environment
McCabe, Donald L. – Liberal Education, 2005
Just as the African tribal maxim proclaims that "it takes a village to raise a child," this author argues that it takes the whole campus community--students, faculty, and administrators--to effectively educate a student. The goal of educators should not be simply to reduce cheating, but to find innovative and creative ways to use academic…
Descriptors: Integrity, Educational Objectives, Educational Opportunities, Cheating
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Faia, Michael A. – Liberal Education, 1976
On the premise that if grading is the main cause of student cheating then course evaluations by students may lead to cheating by faculty members, the author compares the two types of cheating, listing comparable rationale and techniques. (JT)
Descriptors: Cheating, College Faculty, College Students, Course Evaluation