Title: Academic Integrity - A Research Update
1Academic Integrity - A Research Update
- Center for Academic Integrity
- Texas AM
- October 20, 2001
2Cheating starts early grows
- Study of single school district in NJ (1999)
- who have copied on a test, let other copy
homework, submitted work done by parents
3Its nothing new!
42001 High School Survey
- Almost 4500 students completed a written survey
in the 2000-2001 school year -
- These students represented 25 schools around the
country - 14 public, 11 private - In class survey - 92 of students receiving
surveys provided a useable response - 52 of respondents were in 11th grade - 17 in
9th, 16 in 10th 15 in 12th
5Major Conclusions
- Cheating is widespread
- Students find it easy to rationalize cheating
- The Internet is raising new questions
- Students feel that many teachers ignore cheating,
at least on occasion - Students cheat for a variety of reasons.
6Cheating Is Widespread
- 74 of respondents reported one or more instances
of serious test cheating - 72 reported one or more instances of serious
cheating on written work - 97 report at least one questionable activity
(copying homework to test copying) - More than 30 of respondents admit to repetitive,
serious cheating on tests/exams
7Students Rationalize Cheating
- If teachers taught better we wouldnt have to
cheat. (12th grader in MA) - Maybe schools and parents should focus on
learning instead of grades. (MI- 11th) - Cheating is a part of high school. (NJ-12th
grade) - You do what it takes to succeed in life. Were
afraid to fail. (OH-11th grade)
8Plagiarism The Internet
- 15 have submitted a paper obtained in large part
from a term paper mill/website - 52 have copied a few sentences from a website
w/o citing the source - 90 of the students using the Internet to
plagiarize have also plagiarized from written
sources. (The Web has created few new cheaters
- 6 of all students.)
9Plagiarism The Internet
- The technologies and sites available are almost
endless - on-line Cliff Notes, language
translators, HW chat rooms, etc. - Many students are not sure whether submitting
material downloaded from the Internet is
cheating.
10Do Teachers Ignore Cheating?
- 47 of students think teachers do sometimes
ignore cheating. - The major reasons
- Dont want to deal with hassle (18)
- Dont care (11)
- Not worth trouble on small assignments (7)
11Why Students Cheat
- Lazy/dont study/didnt prepare 32
- To pass/get good grades 29
- Pressures to succeed 12
- Dont know answers/understand 9
- Time pressure (too much work) 5
- Other 13
12Many students dont consider these behaviors
cheating
- Working on assignments with 71
- others when told not to
- Copying few sentences w/o citation 57
- Turn in work done by parents 53
- Got Q/A from someone who 50
- has already taken the test/exam
13Random Student Comments
- Unless someone makes teachers care about
cheating, it wont be stopped. - It is unfair that teachers dont take it
seriously b/c then the honest students get the
bad end of the deal. - Cheating will always exist as long as parents
place the emphasis on grades rather than
learning. The parent-student relation adds
greatly to the dumbing down of America.
14Random Student Comments
- I think that cheating has become so common that
its starting to become normal in some cases. - There is no way of stopping it. Only the
students themselves have the power to do so.
Restrictions arent the problem, but the morals
of students sure are.
15Recent College Research
- 1990 - 6,073 students at 31 schools (Codes)
- 1993 - 1,793 students at 9 public universities
- 1995 - 4,273 students at 31 schools (Replication)
- 1999 - Students/faculty at 21 schools (Templeton)
- 2001/2 - Assessment Project Survey
16Caveats - College Research
- Self-report data
- Low (and decreasing) response rates
- Changing definition of cheating????
- Increasing of female respondents
17Profile of Participating Schools
- 1995 1993
- Code No Code
- N 14 17
9 - Enrollment 3407 3442
12239 - Mean SAT 1249 1236
1027 - Off Campus 16 20
66 - Respondents 3013 3083 1793
18Traditional Honor Codes
- Unproctored exams
- Pledge
- Student judiciary
- Non-toleration
19Profile of Participating Schools - 1999
- Modified No
Code
Code Code - N
9 3
9 - Enrollment 5226 17487
5523 - Mean SAT 1207 1145
1081 - Off Campus 39 76 59
- Respondents 1080 376
776
20Modified Honor Codes
- Student judiciary
- Pledge
- Academic integrity a campus-wide
- priority
- Rehabilitative sanctions
21Institutional Factors That Influence Cheating
- Cheating is campus norm (cheating culture)
- School has no honor code
- Penalties for cheating are not severe
- Faculty understanding/support of academic
integrity policies is low - Little chance of getting caught
- Cheating higher at larger, less selective schools
22Personal Factors That Influence Cheating
- Business/engineering majors
- Future plans involve business
- Men generally self-report more cheating
- Fraternity/sorority members
- Younger students
- Students with lower GPAs
23Summary Cheating Indicators
- 1993 1995
1999 Code NC Code
Mod NC - Test Cheating 64 30 45 23
36 45 - Written Cheating 66 42 58
45 51 56 - Serious Cheating 82 54 71 53
61 68 - All Cheating 87 62 83 68
73 83 - Repeat Test Cheating 27 7 17 6
11 17 N 1793
2303 1970 1091 376 763
24Summary Cheating Indicators -Student vs. Faculty
Perspectives
- Students
Faculty - Test Cheating 23 - 45 29 - 55
- Written Cheating 45 - 56 76 - 83
- Serious Cheating 53 - 68 81 - 90
- All Cheating 68 - 83 85 - 91
- Repetitive Test 6 - 17 6 -
21
25Most frequent types of test/examination cheating
-
1999
1963 1993 Code
Mod NC - Copied on exam 26 52 15 24
32 - Used crib notes 6 27 9
13 19 - Helped other 23 37 10
19 26 - Pretest info 33 29 28
38 54 1963 1999
Q/A 1993 Unfair methods
26Most frequent types of written cheating
- 1999
1963 1993
Code Mod NC - Collaboration 11 49 40
43 49 - No footnoting 49 54 36
42 45 - Plagiarism 30 26
14 19 19
27Serious CheatingStudents vs. Faculty
- Students
Faculty -
- Copying on exam/crib notes 78
95 - Help other on test 72
94 - Plagiarism 69
92 - Collaboration 24
52 - Failure to footnote 35
40 - Falsify lab data 49
95 - Paper mill/Internet plagiarism 70
90 -
28New technologies are an issue
- Downloading papers from the Internet
- 5 - 10 admit theyve done it and one-quarter
dont think its serious cheating - Internet plagiarism
- 10 - 20 have cut and pasted material into a
paper without citing the source and almost half
dont think its serious cheating
29http//www.turnitin.com
30Students are notlikely to report others
- Code Mod NC
- who think typical student would report
35 19 13 - who think typical
- student would report
- a close friend 9 3 2
- Actual reporting 14
13 10 -
- (Includes anonymous reporting and general
reporting - e.g., not naming alleged cheater)
31Why Students HaveDifficulty Reporting
- Code Mod NC
- Not my concern/respons. 14 16
27 - Dont want to be a rat 15 11
15 -
- Dont want to get involved 7 9 8
- Friend 11 8
4 - Lack proof 10 9 5
32Faculty Safeguards Against Cheating
- Code Mod NC
- Change exams regularly 70 82
79 - Discuss imp. of integrity 55 59
63 - Information in syllabus 52 61
57 - Remind students of policy 60 47
48 - Different versions of exams 28 42
49
33Faculty self-reports of reactions to serious
cheating
- 55 have reprimanded a student
- 40 have lowered a students grade
- 30 referred to appropriate authority
- 21 have referred issue to Chair
- 6 have reacted in some other way
- 32 have done nothing!
34Faculty satisfaction withhandling of cheating
reports
- Code
Mod. NC - Satisfied 61 53
51 - Very satisfied 20 25 20
- Unsatisfied 19 22 29
-
- N 124 55 174
35Feel Campus Academic Integrity Policy is
Effective
- Students Faculty
- No Code 56 30
- Modified Code 63 25
- Code 64 53
36Some Possible Resources
37- Academic Integrity 10 Principles
- McCabe Pavela
- December 1997
- Principles of academic integrity for faculty.
38Principles of Academic Integrity for Faculty
- Foster an environment of trust in the
classroom. - Most students are mature adults, and value an
environment free of arbitrary rules and trivial
assignments, where trust is earned, and given.
39Principles of AcademicIntegrity for Faculty
- Encourage student responsibility for academic
integrity. - Students want to work in communities where
competition is fair, integrity is respected, and
cheating is punished.
40Principles of AcademicIntegrity for Faculty
- Clarify expectations for students. Faculty
must clarify their expectations regarding
honesty in academic work, including the nature
and scope of collaboration. Most students want
such guidance.
41Principles of AcademicIntegrity for Faculty
- Reduce opportunities to engage in academic
dishonesty. Students should not be
tempted to engage in acts of academic dishonesty
by ambiguous policies, undefined or unrealistic
standards for collaboration, inadequate classroom
management, or poor examination security.
42Principles of AcademicIntegrity for Faculty
- Challenge academic dishonesty when it
occurs. - Faculty who ignore academic dishonesty send the
message that the core values of academic life are
not worth any significant effort to enforce.
43Principles of AcademicIntegrity for Faculty
- Help define and support campus-wide academic
integrity standards. - Although faculty members should be the primary
role models for academic integrity, defining,
promoting, and protecting academic integrity must
be a community-wide responsibility.
44http//www.uga.berkeley.edu/sled/bgd/prevent.html
45Davis (1993)
- Make sure students know criteria for evaluation.
- Learn to recognize signs of stress in students.
- Ensure equal access to study materials.
- Make sure students feel they can succeed in class
w/o cheating.
46Davis (1993)
- Clarify distinctions between paraphrasing,
plagiarism, and direct citation. - Assign specific topics.
- Change assignments across semesters.
- Require first drafts, early discussion, etc.
47University of Maryland
- A great resource for model student codes.
- http//www.inform.umd.edu/campusinfo/
- departments/jpo/ai/index.html
48- Some Good News
- About Academic Integrity
- McCabe Pavela
- Sept./Oct. 2000
- The basic elements of a
- modified honor code strategy.
49Implementing aModified Honor Code
- Ask students about the nature and extent of
campus cheating. - Perhaps form an Academic Integrity Advisory
Council consisting of a diverse group of student
leaders. Invite key faculty to participate.
50Implementing a Modified Honor Code
- Give interested students and faculty a voice in
setting campus policy. - Allow students to play a major role in the
resolution of contested cases.
51Implementing a Modified Honor Code
- Enforce significant sanctions, keyed to an
academic integrity seminar. - Simple penalties may not be effective deterrents.
Consider the XF sanction with the opportunity
to remove the X.
52Implementing a Modified Honor Code
- Help student leaders educate their peers.
- Communicate a culture of integrity to students,
especially new students.
53Implementing a Modified Honor Code
- Develop fair, prompt and efficient due process
procedures. - (See www.umd.edu/ethics under library for a
model code.) - Faculty participation will be encouraged if
faculty members are allowed some discretion to
resolve less serious, first offenses.
54Implementing a Modified Honor Code
- Encourage presidential leadership.
- What presidents choose to emphasize becomes a
campus-wide focus. Interest the president
through student-led initiatives.