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Calabrese, Raymond L.; Roberts, Brian – International Journal of Educational Management, 2004
Academic misconduct in research is of growing concern to funding agencies, scholars, and academic journal editors. Scholarly publication has ethical implications researchers, reviewers, and journal editors. The theoretical background of the ethics of scholarly publication is explored as well as the use of a case study of an untenured researcher…
Descriptors: Cheating, Periodicals, Researchers, Scholastic Journalism
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Whitman, Glenn – History Teacher, 2003
In May 2001, students in the author's Advanced Placement (AP) United States History class were embroiled in a controversy surrounding the AP exam, in particular, having access to the exam's Document Based Question (DBQ) and free response portion prior to the test's administration. Prior to the exam, the College Board had provided a fifty-year time…
Descriptors: United States History, Standardized Tests, Advanced Placement Programs, Integrity
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Sierra, Jeremy J.; Hyman, Michael R. – Journal of Marketing Education, 2006
Although prior pedagogy research indicates significant relationships between several student characteristics and cheating intentions, no research has examined the simultaneous effect of cognition and anticipated emotions on such intentions. To explore the possibility that imagined outcomes--prompted by anticipated emotions--and select cognitive…
Descriptors: Locus of Control, Student Attitudes, Cheating, Student Characteristics
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Vojak, Colleen – Ethics and Education, 2006
Several recent studies indicate that cheating has become both more prevalent and more socially acceptable. In this article I draw parallels between market values and student attitudes about cheating. They include: (1) reduction of a broad range of goods to their economic value, (2) use of non-reciprocity as a guiding principle, (3) valuing the…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Cheating, Ethics, Popular Culture
Hughes, Julia M. Christensen; McCabe, Donald L. – Canadian Journal of Higher Education, 2006
Research suggests that the majority of U.S. undergraduate students have engaged in some form of misconduct while completing their academic work, despite knowing that such behaviour is ethically or morally wrong. U.S.-based studies have also identified myriad personal and institutional factors associated with academic misconduct. Implicit in some…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Undergraduate Students, Integrity
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Gallant, Tricia Bertram; Drinan, Patrick – NASPA Journal, 2006
Issues surrounding student cheating and plagiarism are ubiquitous in higher education. Research has consistently found gaps between policies and practices on our campuses, a struggle for those student affairs professionals charged with institutionalizing the value of academic integrity. While the motivations and roles of students have been…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Integrity, Cheating, Teacher Role
Gold, Stephanie – Technology & Learning, 2006
The day is past when educators can legitimately claim ignorance of digital copyright and fair use laws. The ed tech community has addressed digital copyright and fair use a lot in recent years. There is still, however, the ongoing challenge of keeping up with ever-changing statutes as technology itself matures, not to mention the necessity of…
Descriptors: Copyrights, Technology Uses in Education, Compliance (Legal), Plagiarism
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Peng, Zhuoming – Journal of Educators Online, 2007
The primary benefit of providing out-of-class online quizzes in a face-to-face class is to gain more in-class time. A study designed to investigate this issue was conducted during the Spring 2006 and Spring 2007 semesters. Thirty-one and 34 Corporate Finance undergraduate students from each semester, and 33 and 36 Investments undergraduate…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Cheating, Tests, Business Administration Education
Colton, Gregg D. – 1997
Technology has provided the public with the ability to steal the contents of multiple examinations in a short time period and at minimal cost. No examination is safe from compromise, and the only variable is the extent and sophistication used to bring about the compromise or theft. With the easy availability of micro-video equipment, audio…
Descriptors: Audiotape Recordings, Cheating, Computer Assisted Testing, Elementary Secondary Education
Mouritzen, Gaye S. – 1992
A practicum was designed to deal with the problem of cheating in a public alternative high school for at-risk students. Questionnaires completed by the teachers and the student body indicated that students had a deficiency in understanding and applying principles of accepted right and wrong to situations involving the possibility of cheating.…
Descriptors: Cheating, Educational Research, English Instruction, Ethical Instruction
General Accounting Office, Washington, DC. National Security and International Affairs Div. – 1991
This report discusses findings of a study of two issues during the 1989-90 academic year at the United States Naval Academy: the removal of the Chairman of the Electrical Engineering Department, and the Superintendent's decision to give a final electrical engineering examination that might have been compromised. The study reviewed the effect of…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Standards, Administrative Change, Cheating
Moffatt, Michael – 1990
This paper examines the phenomenon of undergraduate cheating and reports on a survey returned by 232 students at Rutgers University (New Jersey) concerning their cheating experiences. Findings indicated 22 percent of students said they had never cheated in college, 45 percent indicated they had cheated occasionally (in "one or two"…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cheating, Fraternities, Grade Point Average
Tauber, Robert T. – 1984
The issue of whether cheating and plagiarism should be categorized as an academic evaluation or disciplinary misconduct is discussed. It is claimed that if these offenses are categorized as disciplinary misconduct, students are entitled to some due process. However, if cheating and plagiarism are classified as academic evaluations, students are…
Descriptors: Cheating, Codes of Ethics, College Faculty, College Students
Lewis, Katharine H.; Hartnett, John J. – 1983
Some research has shown that women's achievements in traditionally masculine fields are devalued. To determine if females would be judged more harshly than males for performing unethical behaviors in order to gain entry in competitive professions, and to examine gender differences in the evaluation of unethical conduct, college students (52 males…
Descriptors: Cheating, College Students, Ethics, Higher Education
Frary, Robert B. – 1978
Students in a large state university were surveyed to determine their beliefs about penalty levels appropriate for persons found guilty of various acts of academic dishonesty. There were two samples: one was random, and the other consisted of students who were strongly believed to have cheated by copying answers on one or more multiple-choice…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Behavior Standards, Cheating, Discipline Policy
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