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McCabe, Donald L. – Research in Higher Education, 1993
A study of 789 college faculty at 16 institutions of higher education found faculty reluctant to report students for academic dishonesty, even at institutions with strong honor codes. Most preferred that faculty, students, and administrators all be involved in handling incidents of cheating. Student attitudes, determined in an earlier study, are…
Descriptors: Cheating, Codes of Ethics, College Faculty, College Students
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Kibler, William L. – NASPA Journal, 1993
Provides review of current literature to support position that academic dishonesty is student development problem best addressed from student development perspective. Examines academic dishonesty as contemporary problem in higher education; explores contentions about what causes academic dishonesty; addresses student development perspective; and…
Descriptors: Cheating, College Students, Higher Education, Lying
Cordes, Colleen – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1991
Recent federal audits of research project overhead charges at 13 universities uncovered over $13 million in inappropriate items. Proposals for reform include a federal upper limit on overhead rates and a fixed institutional overhead rate charged to any sponsor. Concern continues over repayment to the government of previous wrongful collections by…
Descriptors: Cheating, Disclosure, Federal Aid, Financial Audits
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Blinn, Lorena V. – Journal of College Science Teaching, 1994
Describes a method to prevent and uncover cheating during testing in large university classes. (PR)
Descriptors: Cheating, College Science, Higher Education, Science Education
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Lupton, Robert A.; Chapman, Kenneth J.; Weiss, John E. – Journal of Education for Business, 2000
Comparison of 443 U.S. and 192 Polish business students revealed significant differences in behavior and beliefs about cheating. A much larger share of Polish students reported having cheated (84% vs. 55.4% U.S.) and knowing students who cheated (91% vs. 77.3% U.S.). Polish students were more likely to believe that most students cheat some time…
Descriptors: Business Education, Cheating, Cross Cultural Studies, Foreign Countries
Zlatos, Bill – Executive Educator, 1996
Texas takes test security seriously. Joe Lucio, the Texas Ranger of testing, investigates security breaches of the Texas Assessment of Academic Skills--a mandatory, high-stakes examination. Students cheat mainly on the test required for graduation. Educators cheat by helping test-takers. Lucio's low-key, persistent investigative style usually…
Descriptors: Achievement Tests, Cheating, Elementary Secondary Education, Graduation Requirements
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Phillips, Melodie R.; Horton, Veronica – International Journal of Educational Management, 2000
Discussion of cheating by business education students first examines the current state of integration of the Internet into marketing education. Then it explores areas of concern that face education in relation to the use of the Internet, including student research and reference techniques, plagiarism, and accessibility of custom and off-the-shelf…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Cheating, Higher Education, Internet
Ligon, Glynn D. – School Administrator, 2000
Although educator cheating (mostly to "help" students) is more commonplace, it should not be tolerated. The best course is building assessment systems with integrity. Several cheating types, such as the self-aggrandizing teacher and pocket-lining administrator, are explained. A sidebar lists eight systemic problems with testing. (MLH)
Descriptors: Cheating, Elementary Secondary Education, Ethics, High Stakes Tests
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Druger, Marvin – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2000
Provides helpful guidelines for creating exams and grading. Three main questions are addressed: (1) If it is known what content is important, then why not tell the students?; (2) Should students compete against each other or compete against course content?; and (3) What is the best way to handle cheating? (SAH)
Descriptors: Cheating, Evaluation, Grading, Higher Education
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Rawwas, Mohammed Y. A.; Isakson, Hans R. – Journal of Education for Business, 2000
A survey of 291 marketing and finance students found that those who were idealists, older, economics majors or middle children tended to behave more ethically. Students who were male, tolerant, relativistic, and opportunistic tended to behave less ethically. Opportunity to cheat explained cheating more than other determinants. (SK)
Descriptors: Beliefs, Business Education, Cheating, College Students
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McMurtry, Kim – T.H.E. Journal, 2001
Discusses electronic cheating in higher education made possible by new technologies. Highlights include statistics on plagiarism; using Web search engines and paper mills; and ways to combat cheating, including academic honesty policies, designing writing assignments with specific goals and instructions, being aware of what is available on the…
Descriptors: Cheating, Higher Education, Honesty, Plagiarism
Hoover, Eric – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2002
Discusses how a plagiarism scandal has again "mired" the University of Virginia's fabled judicial system in "trauma" and lawsuits, while some systems that are less well known, such as that of Georgia Tech, may be functioning more effectively. (EV)
Descriptors: Cheating, Codes of Ethics, Court Litigation, Discipline Policy
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Baggaley, Jon; Spencer, Bob – Learning, Media & Technology, 2005
The ease with which material may be "copied and pasted" from the Internet into written work is raising concern in educational institutions, and particularly in those disciplines that use online sources and methods in their curriculum. A case of "serial plagiarism" is discussed, in the work of a graduate student in an online distance education…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, Graduate Students, Distance Education, Cheating
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Park, Chris – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2004
This paper explores why an institutional framework for dealing with plagiarism by students is necessary and it outlines the main ingredients of such a framework that has been developed at Lancaster University. It defines plagiarism as a form of academic malpractice and frames it as a breach of academic integrity. The framework places a strong…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Plagiarism, Integrity
Barlow, Dudley – Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 2005
Everyone knows that plagiarism among high school and college students is so pervasive that combating it has become cottage industry. One solution to this problem is for teachers to purchase or subscribe to plagiarism detection computer programs. Many students and adults seem to have little awareness of or little regard for intellectual property.…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, Computer Software, Writing Assignments, Ethics
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