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Miller, Arden; Shoptaugh, Carol; Wooldridge, Jessica – Journal of Experimental Education, 2011
The authors investigated the relations among reasons students gave for why they would not cheat in response to a cheating vignette, self-reported cheating, and the extent to which students take responsibility for promoting academic integrity. The authors surveyed 1,086 graduate and undergraduate students. Students who said they would not cheat…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Undergraduate Students, Cheating, Integrity
Greer, Jennifer L. – ProQuest LLC, 2012
The public expects its educational leaders--from instructional leaders and principals to college administrators and deans--to be moral exemplars. Nowhere is moral behavior more central to the central mission of teaching and learning than in the realm of academic integrity, where decisions are made daily about grading, testing, promotion,…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Problem Solving, Authors, Moral Issues
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Hamlen, Karla R. – Computers & Education, 2012
In this study, an online survey was utilized to investigate relationships among participants' willingness to cheat in academic or business settings and the strategies they tend to utilize in video game play. 113 participants completed the survey, and 86 students (23 middle school, 44 high school, 8 college undergraduate, and 11 graduate) yielded…
Descriptors: Influence of Technology, Video Games, Factor Analysis, Cheating
Thorne-Figueroa, Jacqueline Marie – ProQuest LLC, 2010
Since 1941, academic dishonesty has been recognized in the professional literature as a serious problem. Personality Types A and B have been suspected as contributors to cheating. In this quasi-experimental study, undergraduate and graduate students (N = 112) at one academic institution were surveyed about their attitudes and cheating behavior.…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Social Desirability, Cheating, Integrity
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Crawford, Constance J.; Stellenwerf, Anita L. – Contemporary Issues in Education Research, 2009
A recent survey of undergraduate business students indicated that an overwhelming majority, over 75%, of the participants admitted to cheating. When graduate school majors were surveyed, research indicates that the biggest cheaters, 56% overall, were business majors. Are students behaving in response to societal rewards of corporate malfeasance…
Descriptors: Cheating, Finance Occupations, Undergraduate Students, Correlation