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Bushweller, Kevin – American School Board Journal, 1999
Many high school students, desperate for better grades or too lazy to study, are cheating to get ahead. In a 1998 "American School Board Journal" survey, 90% of teachers claimed cheating was a problem. High achievers could be the worst offenders. Sidebars discuss parents who condone cheating, student honor codes, and steps boards can take. (MLH)
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Cheating, Codes of Ethics, College Bound Students
Peer reviewedHill, Benjamin – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 1996
Differences between U.S. and Japanese school rules in relation to the different roles schools play in enculturating their students are examined. Japanese schools are allocated more responsibility in the moral education and discipline of children, but less responsibility in sorting students through academic competition. (MMU)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Acculturation, Cheating, Comparative Education
Peer reviewedMcCabe, Donald; Trevino, Linda Klebe; Butterfield, Kenneth D. – Journal of Higher Education, 1999
Survey data from 4,285 students in 31 colleges and universities indicates students at schools with academic honor codes view the issue of academic integrity in a fundamentally different way than do students at non-honor code institutions. This difference seems to stem from the presence of an honor code and its influence on the way students think…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Cheating, Codes of Ethics, College Environment
Peer reviewedDwyer, David J.; Hecht, Jeffrey B. – NASPA Journal, 1996
An investigation of the use of probabilistic methodologies for identifying cheaters on classroom multiple-choice examinations concludes that imperfections in the detection techniques, coupled with legal issues, necessarily limit the applicability and utility of these strategies. (Author)
Descriptors: Cheating, Codes of Ethics, College Students, Discipline Policy
Peer reviewedMcCabe, Donald; Pavela, Gary – Change, 2000
Reports that despite alarming news stories about growing academic dishonesty on college campuses, new research confirms the effectiveness of strategies such as modified honor codes that emphasize student leadership and intensive programming about the importance of academic integrity. Offers 10 specific guidelines for implementing a modified honor…
Descriptors: Cheating, Codes of Ethics, Ethics, Higher Education
Lindsay, Dianna M. – Principal Leadership, 2000
Recently, a group of students at an Ohio high school convinced administrators to consider adopting an honor code. A committee examined how academic integrity could be incorporated into school culture. The evolving system's fundamental values hinge on honesty, fairness, respect, and stakeholder responsibility. (MLH)
Descriptors: Cheating, Codes of Ethics, Committees, High Schools
Schneider, Alison – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1999
While college faculty complain about student cheating and plagiarism, many do little or nothing about it. Few lodge formal complaints against individual students, finding the campus judicial process laborious, and punishments often unrelated to the offense. At institutions with honor codes, the issues can be different, with reporting of…
Descriptors: Cheating, Codes of Ethics, College Faculty, College Students
McCabe, Donald L. – Liberal Education, 2005
Just as the African tribal maxim proclaims that "it takes a village to raise a child," this author argues that it takes the whole campus community--students, faculty, and administrators--to effectively educate a student. The goal of educators should not be simply to reduce cheating, but to find innovative and creative ways to use academic…
Descriptors: Integrity, Educational Objectives, Educational Opportunities, Cheating
Bennett, Roger – Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education, 2005
A model intended to explain the incidence of plagiarism among undergraduates in the Business Studies department of a post-1992 university was constructed and tested on a sample of 249 students completing Business Studies units at a post-1992 university in Greater London. It was hypothesised that the occurrence of plagiarism could be predicted via…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, Foreign Countries, Student Attitudes, Undergraduate Students
Austin, Zubin; Simpson, Stephanie; Reynen, Emily – Teaching in Higher Education, 2005
Numerous explanations have been offered to explain the ubiquity and enduring nature of academic dishonesty in post-secondary education and professional programs, including dissatisfaction with curricula, disengagement from academic institutions, and poor admissions criteria for students. A pilot study in Canadian pharmacy education was undertaken…
Descriptors: Pharmacy, Pharmaceutical Education, Moral Development, Cheating
Koenig, Amy L.; Cicchetti, Dante; Rogosch, Fred A. – Social Development, 2004
In this investigation, the moral development of physically abused (N = 28), neglected (N = 26), and nonmaltreated (N = 28) five-year-old children from low socioeconomic backgrounds was examined through observational measures of prosocial behaviors, moral transgressions, and emotions associated with moral development. Findings showed that…
Descriptors: Child Neglect, Child Abuse, Cheating, Females
Anderman, Eric M.; Midgley, Carol – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 2004
Changes in early adolescents' self-reported cheating behaviors in mathematics before and after the transition from middle school to high school are examined. Students were surveyed in school regarding their cheating behaviors in math, and the motivational goal structures perceived in their math classrooms. Surveys were completed twice during the…
Descriptors: Student Motivation, Cheating, Student Behavior, Grade 8
Casper, Jonathan – Qualitative Report, 2006
Because junior tennis players have to enforce the rules of the game against each other, cheating to give a player an unfair advantage is common. While this deviant behavior is found to be commonplace in the sport, there is little research to investigate its cause or influences. Results indicated that junior players felt that personal and parental…
Descriptors: Racquet Sports, Cheating, Behavior Problems, Ethics
Haladyna, Thomas M. – Educational Horizons, 2006
This article argues that the validity of standardized achievement test-score interpretation and use is problematic; consequently, confidence and trust in such test scores may often be unwarranted. The problem is particularly severe in high-stakes situations. This essay provides a context for understanding standardized achievement testing, then…
Descriptors: Validity, Testing, Achievement Tests, Standardized Tests
Harwood, Paul G.; Asal, Victor – Praeger, 2007
Asal and Harwood explore how today's information technology is changing how teachers educate and are educated. Focusing on the United States, with useful insights from the classroom digital revolution in a few other places (the United Kingdom, Australia, and India), the authors investigate the impact of today's technologies on education--how they…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Profiles, Internet, Educational Technology

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