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Risacher, Joanne; Slonaker, William – NASPA Journal, 1996
This study of National Association of Student Personnel Administrators (NASPA) institutional members (n=294) examines professional preferences for educationally and legally sound procedures to manage academic misconduct. Based on the results, a model policy is provided as a benchmark of current thought against which academic institutions may…
Descriptors: Administrators, Cheating, College Students, Discipline Policy
Walfish, Daniel – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2001
Describes some of the shortcuts taken by Chinese students who wish to study in the United States, including merely dishonest approaches like ghostwritten essays and actual criminal techniques like forgery and using stand-ins to take tests. Focuses on the New Oriental School, a private Chinese institution in Beijing that specializes in getting…
Descriptors: Admission (School), Cheating, College Applicants, Foreign Countries
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Nonis, Sarath; Swift, Cathy Owens – Journal of Education for Business, 2001
A survey of 1,051 business students found that those who believed that dishonest acts such as cheating are acceptable are more likely to engage in them. Those who engage in dishonest acts in class are more likely to do so in the workplace. (Contains 76 references.) (SK)
Descriptors: Beliefs, Business Education, Cheating, Classroom Environment
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Jensen-Campbell, Lauri A.; Graziano, William G. – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly: Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2005
Self-regulation is critical to social and personality development in all cultures. Self-regulation may have developmental origins in temperament, yet it also interacts with socialization processes. This research specifically probes children's self-regulation during resistance to temptation. Socialization of self-regulation may be influenced by the…
Descriptors: Children, Self Control, Resistance (Psychology), Socialization
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
Bracey, Gerald W. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2005
When Gerald W. Bracey heard that John Fremer, a long-time friend and Educational Testing Service psychometrician, had retired and now worked for Caveon.com, a firm dedicated to detecting cheating, Bracey was amused. Snooping for cheats seemed like a trivial pursuit compared to the lofty testing enterprises he had undertaken at ETS. No more. Bracey…
Descriptors: Ethics, Achievement Tests, Student Evaluation, High School Students
Bracey, Gerald W. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2005
There are only three South Korean universities that count in Koreans' eyes and they enroll 15,000 students, chosen from 873,000 applicants (1.7%), based on the results of a national exam. The night before the national exam, many mothers pray all night in temple. (They also prayed the previous 99 nights, but not so long.) The country comes to a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Evaluation, Educational Change, National Standards
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Bayer, Alan E.; Braxton, John M. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2004
Based on the research reported in this volume, the authors offer recommendations for all affected parties.
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Undergraduate Students, Cheating, Student Rights
Johnson, Doug – Library Media Connection, 2004
Student plagiarism is an important topic of discussion in the teaching profession. Part of the profession mission should be to help classroom teachers improve the quality of their research assignment (whether they want to or not).
Descriptors: Student Research, Research Methodology, Educational Research, Plagiarism
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Clark, Roy W. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2004
The similar problems faced by the physics and chemistry teachers are described. The issue of cheating on tests in the classroom can be addressed by the teachers by comparing methods for monitoring the classroom behavior.
Descriptors: Student Behavior, Physics, Chemistry, Cheating
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Chandrasoma, Ranamukalage; Thompson, Celia; Pennycook, Alastair – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2004
The debate about what constitutes plagiarism and how it should be dealt with in the academy continues to gain momentum. The response from many higher education institutions is to channel ever-increasing amounts of resources into plagiarism detection technologies, rather than trying to ascertain why plagiarism might be occurring in the first place.…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Plagiarism, Higher Education, Cheating
Osipian, Ararat L. – Online Submission, 2007
This book would be of high interest for policymakers, managers, and theorists. While policymakers, university administrators, and business managers will appreciate good description of forms of cooperation of industries and universities as well as problems that such cooperation creates or exacerbates and some of the prescriptions, offered by the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Cooperation, Partnerships in Education, Cheating
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Osipian, Ararat L. – Research in Comparative and International Education, 2007
Corruption is a complex and multifaceted phenomenon. Forms of corruption are multiple. Measuring corruption is necessary not only for getting ideas about the scale and scope of the problem, but for making simple comparisons between the countries and conducting comparative analysis of corruption. While the total impact of corruption is indeed…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Measurement Techniques, Context Effect, Cheating
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Burrus, Robert T.; McGoldrick, KimMarie; Schuhmann, Peter W. – Journal of Economic Education, 2007
The authors examine student cheating based on implicit and explicit definitions of cheating. Prior to being provided a definition of cheating, students reported whether they had cheated. Students were then provided a definition of cheating and asked to rereport their cheating behaviors. Results indicate that students do not understand what…
Descriptors: Sororities, Drinking, Cheating, College Students
Durham, Quentin – Rowman & Littlefield Education, 2006
It is commonly believed that highly subjective humans ultimately perform all testing and grading efforts and that all testing and grading is completely subjective. However, Quentin Durham argues that there is no such thing as objective testing or grading. With wit and clarity, "The Realities of Classroom Testing and Grading" suggests that all…
Descriptors: Testing, Grading, Tests, Objective Tests
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