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Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results Save | Export
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Martin Daumiller; Tanja Fritz; Hernán González Cruz; Selma C. Rudert; Stefan Janke – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2024
Academic dishonesty threatens the integrity of performance assessment, making it crucial to understand the various types and predictors of such behavior. Second-party cheating, which refers to aiding and abetting cheating behaviors, is similarly prevalent as individualistic cheating, yet has received limited research attention. We follow up on…
Descriptors: Cheating, Prosocial Behavior, Goal Orientation, Cooperation
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Eva Dias-Oliveira; Catarina Morais; Rita Pasion; Julia Hodgson – SAGE Open, 2024
The Fraud Diamond theory (rationalization, opportunity, motivation and perceived capability) has been widely used as a framework to explain criminal behavior. However, little is known about its application in an academic context. Research on the relationship between the prevalence of academic fraud (e.g., cheating on exams, plagiarizing essays)…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Behavior, Student Attitudes, Deception
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Grenness, Tor – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2023
Student academic dishonesty is a pervasive problem for higher education institutions all over the world. The purpose of the present study is to take an interpretative, qualitative approach intended to understand student "thinking" and "reflections" when it comes to the perceived seriousness and prevalence of cheating. Peer…
Descriptors: Cheating, Student Attitudes, Business Administration Education, Higher Education
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Daumiller, Martin; Janke, Stefan – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2020
Background: Previous research has shown that achievement goals affect the frequency of academic dishonesty. However, mixed findings suggest that especially the effect of performance goals might depend on contextual factors. Aims: We wanted to investigate whether crucial aspects of the achievement situation influence the magnitude of the effect of…
Descriptors: Goal Orientation, Behavior Standards, Social Behavior, Ethics
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Koc, Sevgi; Memduhoglu, Hasan Basri – Cypriot Journal of Educational Sciences, 2020
This study aimed to identify the causal relationships amongst attitude, subjective norms, perceived behavioural control, moral obligation and intention towards cheating by the Theory of Planned Behaviour. The study sample (n = 1,220) consists of senior students at the faculties of Van Yuzuncu Yil University, Turkey. The data were collected with…
Descriptors: Cheating, Student Behavior, Behavior Theories, Student Attitudes
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Aikins, Ross – Journal of Academic Ethics, 2019
So-called cognitive enhancing drugs (CEDs) are relatively common in higher education, especially among students who are white, male, and attend highly selective institutions. Using qualitative data from a diverse sample of 32 students at an elite university, the present study aims to examine whether students perceive CED use to be advantageous,…
Descriptors: Cheating, Drug Use, Selective Admission, Student Attitudes
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Rettinger, David A. – Theory Into Practice, 2017
Given that students at secondary and postsecondary levels believe that certain behaviors are morally wrong and consider them cheating, they still perform them, albeit infrequently. This article examines the psychology of cheating, emphasizing individual psychological factors that influence integrity behavior. From this research, strategies to…
Descriptors: Cheating, Prevention, Emotional Problems, Student Attitudes
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Tatum, Holly; Schwartz, Beth M. – Theory Into Practice, 2017
Although there is evidence of cheating at all levels of education, institutions often do not implement or design integrity policies, such as honor codes, to prevent and adjudicate academic dishonesty. Further, faculty members rarely discuss academic integrity expectations or policies with their students. When cheating does occur, faculty members…
Descriptors: Integrity, Evidence Based Practice, Program Improvement, Ethics
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Biswas, Ann E. – Journal of College and Character, 2013
Although most colleges strive to nurture a culture of integrity, incidents of dishonest behavior are on the rise. This article examines the role student development plays in students' perceptions of academic dishonesty and in their willingness to adhere to a code of conduct that may be in sharp contrast to traditional integrity policies.
Descriptors: Student Development, Integrity, College Students, Correlation
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Brooks, Troy; Marini, Zopito; Radue, Jon – Collected Essays on Learning and Teaching, 2011
This paper explores the notion that student behaviour regarding academic integrity and classroom civility are linked, and that intervention methods used to resolve classroom incivility may be used as a response to academic dishonesty. We advance the view that academic integrity and classroom civility refer to a student's willingness to respect the…
Descriptors: Integrity, Ethics, Cheating, Student Attitudes
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Henningsen, Mary Lynn Miller; Valde, Kathleen S.; Denbow, Jessica – Communication Education, 2013
Academic misconduct is a serious, pervasive, communication phenomenon on college campuses. In this study, the goals-plans-action model (Dillard, 1990) was used as a theoretical framework to investigate peer confrontation of cheating and whistle-blowing to a course instructor. In an experiment, participants were asked to respond to measures of…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Cheating, Campuses, Disclosure
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Eastman, Jacqueline K.; Iyer, Rajesh; Reisenwitz, Timothy H. – Journal of College Teaching & Learning, 2008
This paper offers support that those students who felt they had stronger reasons for committing unethical academic behaviors are more likely to report committing academic dishonesty than those who felt they had weaker reasons for unethical academic behaviors. This relationship held for all four categories of academic dishonesty: cheating (on…
Descriptors: Student Behavior, Ethics, Cheating, Plagiarism
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Baldwin, DeWitt C., Jr.; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1996
A survey of 2,459 medical students found that 39% had witnessed cheating in their first 2 years of medical school, and 66.5% had heard about cheating. About 5% reported having cheated during that time. Students appeared resigned to the fact of cheating, but lacked consensus about how to proceed when witnessing it. Guidance in intervening in…
Descriptors: Behavior Standards, Cheating, Educational Needs, Ethics
Frary, Robert B. – 1978
Students in a large state university were surveyed to determine their beliefs about penalty levels appropriate for persons found guilty of various acts of academic dishonesty. There were two samples: one was random, and the other consisted of students who were strongly believed to have cheated by copying answers on one or more multiple-choice…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Behavior Standards, Cheating, Discipline Policy
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Cole, Sally; McCabe, Donald L. – New Directions for Student Services, 1996
Presents statistics and research findings concerning student academic dishonesty and discuss useful processes and sanctions in adjudicating cases. Prevention strategies and ways to implement proactive campus initiatives are also presented. (Author/KW)
Descriptors: Accountability, Behavior Standards, Cheating, Codes of Ethics
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