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James W. Drisko – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2025
The rise of AI generated texts offers promise but creates new challenges for social work teaching. A recent survey found that 89% of higher education students used AI on their homework. AI generated text may be difficult to distinguish from a student's own work, yet are being submitted as the student's own work. This poses new challenges to…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, Social Work, Counselor Training, Artificial Intelligence
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Newman, Joshua – Teaching Public Administration, 2020
Academic integrity matters are relevant to all areas of university teaching, but they are of particular importance to degree programmes whose graduates intend to work in the public service. While a large body of scholarship exists on academic integrity, very little has been written that specifically relates to students who intend to pursue careers…
Descriptors: Integrity, Public Administration Education, Prevention, Plagiarism
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Thienthong, Atikhom – PASAA: Journal of Language Teaching and Learning in Thailand, 2018
Paraphrasing is a signature practice of constructing intertextual discourse in academic writing. It is a story retelling technique commonly employed by academic writing classes to tackle plagiarism. However, teaching and learning of paraphrasing tend to place a very heavy emphasis on literal meanings of source messages and faithful reproductions…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Plagiarism, Inferences, Story Telling
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Kaktinš, Louise – Ethics and Education, 2019
Australian universities are grappling with the challenge of plagiarism among students, particularly international students, with a reliance on software such as Turnitin. Measuring plagiarism in this way has limitations, with consequences for the internalisation of academic integrity by international students. An appraisal of such software…
Descriptors: Computer Software, Computational Linguistics, Writing Evaluation, Cheating
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Houtman, Anne M.; Walker, Sean – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 2010
The authors tested the predictions of a game theory model of plagiarism, using a test population of student papers submitted to an online plagiarism detection program, over five semesters in a non-majors biology course with multiple sections and high enrollment. Consistent with the model, as the probability of detection and the penalty if caught…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Game Theory, Plagiarism, Biology
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Chao, Chia-An; Wilhelm, William J.; Neureuther, Brian D. – Delta Pi Epsilon Journal, 2009
Plagiarism is an increasing problem in high schools and universities. To address the issue of how to teach students not to plagiarize, this study examined several pedagogical approaches for reducing plagiarism and the use of Turnitin, an online plagiarism detection software. The study found a significant difference between the control group and…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, Prevention, Teaching Methods, Documentation
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Belter, Ronald W.; du Pre, Athena – Teaching of Psychology, 2009
This study evaluated how effective an online academic integrity module was at reducing the occurrence of plagiarism in a written assignment for a university course. In a preintervention comparison group, plagiarism was detected in 25.8% of papers submitted, compared with only 6.5% in the group that completed the academic integrity module. The…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, Cheating, Integrity, Student Behavior
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Keck, Casey – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2006
Paraphrasing is considered by many to be an important skill for academic writing, and some have argued that the teaching of paraphrasing might help students avoid copying from source texts. Few studies, however, have investigated the ways in which both L1 and L2 academic writers already use paraphrasing as a textual borrowing strategy when…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Academic Discourse, Plagiarism, College Students
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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
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Snow, Eleanour – Innovate: Journal of Online Education, 2006
The Internet has changed the ways that students think, learn, and write. Students have large amounts of information, largely anonymous and without clear copyright information, literally at their fingertips. Without sufficient guidance, the inappropriate use of this information seems inevitable. Plagiarism among college students is rising, due to…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, Guides, Educational Technology, Tests
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Samuels, Linda B.; Bast, Carol M. – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2006
Plagiarism is certainly not new to academics, but it may be on the rise with easy access to the vast quantities of information available on the Internet. Students researching on the Internet do not have to take handwritten or typewritten notes. They can simply print out or copy and save whatever they find. They are even spared the tedium of having…
Descriptors: Research Papers (Students), Plagiarism, Change Strategies, Writing Assignments
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Kloss, Robert J. – College Teaching, 1996
A technique for starting college students on research paper projects is outlined. The approach, requiring students to begin with a five-minute writing exercise that can form the nucleus of a longer, more intellectually demanding paper involving library work, is felt to stimulate critical thinking and minimize plagiarism. Phased report development…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Cooperative Learning, Critical Thinking