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Jovana Janinovic; Sanja Pekovic; Rajka Djokovic; Dijana Vuckovic – SAGE Open, 2024
This paper examined the role of honor codes and severity of punishment on the students' perception of cheating seriousness in order to assess the effectiveness of institutional policies on preventing the academic misconduct. In order to further put into perspective the obtained results, two moderating factors were included in the empirical…
Descriptors: School Policy, Ethics, Punishment, Cheating
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Olivier Leclerc; Nicolas Klausser – Research Ethics, 2025
Reporting and investigating research misconduct can lead to disciplinary proceedings being initiated, and ultimately to disciplinary sanctions being imposed on convicted scientists. The conversion of research misconduct findings into disciplinary sanctions is poorly understood. This article analyses all the disciplinary decisions handed down on…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Graduate Students, Researchers, Ethics
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Gullifer, Judith; Tyson, Graham A. – Studies in Higher Education, 2010
Plagiarism is perceived to be a growing problem and universities are being required to devote increasing time and resources to combating it. Theory and research in psychology show that a thorough understanding of an individual's view of an issue or problem is an essential requirement for successful change of that person's attitudes and behaviour.…
Descriptors: College Students, Fear, Punishment, Psychological Patterns
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Robinson-Zanartu, Carol; Pena, Elizabeth D.; Cook-Morales, Valerie; Pena, Anna M.; Afshani, Rosalyn; Nguyen, Lynda – School Psychology Quarterly, 2005
Academic dishonesty and its consequences have become increasingly complex. Highly accessible electronic media, profound consequences for misconduct and reporting, and lack of standard practice intensify the issues. We surveyed 270 faculty members to determine whether they had been confronted with plagiarism and if they felt prepared to deal with…
Descriptors: Punishment, Faculty, Plagiarism, Teacher Attitudes
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Goodman, Joan F. – Journal of Moral Education, 2006
It is argued that current school disciplinary policies are ineffective instruments for delivering moral messages: they are poorly justified; fail to distinguish moral violations (violence, vandalism, deception) from conventional school-limited violations (attendance, dress codes, eating venues), leaving the impression that dress code violations…
Descriptors: Sanctions, Negative Reinforcement, Dress Codes, Suspension