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Osipian, Ararat L. – Online Submission, 2007
This book would be of high interest for policymakers, managers, and theorists. While policymakers, university administrators, and business managers will appreciate good description of forms of cooperation of industries and universities as well as problems that such cooperation creates or exacerbates and some of the prescriptions, offered by the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Cooperation, Partnerships in Education, Cheating
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Osipian, Ararat L. – Research in Comparative and International Education, 2007
Corruption is a complex and multifaceted phenomenon. Forms of corruption are multiple. Measuring corruption is necessary not only for getting ideas about the scale and scope of the problem, but for making simple comparisons between the countries and conducting comparative analysis of corruption. While the total impact of corruption is indeed…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Measurement Techniques, Context Effect, Cheating
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Burrus, Robert T.; McGoldrick, KimMarie; Schuhmann, Peter W. – Journal of Economic Education, 2007
The authors examine student cheating based on implicit and explicit definitions of cheating. Prior to being provided a definition of cheating, students reported whether they had cheated. Students were then provided a definition of cheating and asked to rereport their cheating behaviors. Results indicate that students do not understand what…
Descriptors: Sororities, Drinking, Cheating, College Students
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Marks, Anthony M.; Cronje, Johannes C. – Educational Technology & Society, 2008
Computer-based assessments are becoming more commonplace, perhaps as a necessity for faculty to cope with large class sizes. These tests often occur in large computer testing venues in which test security may be compromised. In an attempt to limit the likelihood of cheating in such venues, randomised presentation of items is automatically…
Descriptors: Educational Assessment, Educational Testing, Research Needs, Test Items
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Bong, Mimi – Journal of Experimental Education, 2008
The author examined predictive relations among South Korean high school students' (N = 753) perceptions of their social-psychological environments, personal motivational beliefs, and academic behavior in math. Students' perceptions of their both classroom mastery and performance goal structures predicted their personal mastery goals. Perceptions…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Cheating, Self Efficacy, Academic Achievement
Who's Who among American High School Students, Lake Forest, IL. – 1995
The annual Survey of High Achievers conducted by Who's Who Among American High School Students is the nation's largest, most comprehensive independent sampling of high school students' opinions, attitudes, and behaviors. All the high-achieving 16-18 year old students surveyed have "A" or "B" averages, and 98 percent plan to…
Descriptors: Cheating, Drug Use, High Achievement, High School Students
Roen, Duane H.; McNenny, Geraldine – 1992
Negative attitudes toward collaborative writing are common, especially in the humanities, and some people view it as a form of plagiarism or cheating. Plagiarism, or the borrowing of ideas from other writers, can be both conscious and unconscious, and can stem from a variety of motives. Even single-authored works are products of many minds,…
Descriptors: Cheating, Collaborative Writing, Community Role, Discourse Modes
Masonis, Edward J. – 1987
Security procedures for the New Jersey High School Proficiency Test (HSPT) are discussed and evaluated. All New Jersey high school students are required to pass the HSPT, which was administered for the first time in 1984. Generally, security plans are designed to limit access to test questions prior to test administration and to prevent…
Descriptors: Cheating, Confidentiality, High Schools, Planning
Ross, William G. – 1977
The findings of this paper suggest that when students encounter a situation in which they can benefit by cheating, those who score lowest on the exam are least able to resist the temptation to cheat. Exam scores for 459 beginning psychology students were examined. Each student took four exams, but only on the third was copying made impossible. The…
Descriptors: Antisocial Behavior, Cheating, College Students, Group Testing
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Bushway, Ann; Nash, William R. – Review of Educational Research, 1977
Cheating in the classroom appears to be widespread at all levels of American education. This research review examines: (1) characteristics of cheaters, (2) situational factors influencing the student's decision to cheat or not to cheat, and (3) reasons for cheating, as reported by students. (Author/GDC)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Cheating, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education
Milton, Ohmer; And Others – National Forum: Phi Kappa Phi Journal, 1988
Two issues of college grading must be addressed if recommendations to improve teaching/learning are to succeed: GPAs should not be used for purposes of personnel selection, and it must be admitted that tests and grades have powerful influences on how and what students study and learn. (MLW)
Descriptors: Cheating, College Faculty, College Students, Grade Point Average
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Enker, Myrna S. – Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 1987
Predictors of cheating behavior in American and Israeli society were studied. Predictors in American society were attitudes, normative beliefs, or both together; friends and classmates were stronger influences than families. In Israeli society, normative beliefs were the significant predictors, and family norms influenced cheating behavior. (VM)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Behavior Standards, Cheating, Cultural Differences
Goldman, Jeffrey A.; Olczak, Paul V. – Journal of Counsulting and Clinical Psychology, 1976
The study factorially manipulated instructions (fake bad, be honest again control, fake good) and knowledge of self-actualization (naive, knowledgeable) to determine whether knowledge affects ability to create poor impressions or create good impressions in comparison with appropriate controls on the Personal Orientation Inventory (POI). (Author)
Descriptors: Cheating, College Students, Higher Education, Personality Assessment
Durham, Quentin – Rowman & Littlefield Education, 2006
It is commonly believed that highly subjective humans ultimately perform all testing and grading efforts and that all testing and grading is completely subjective. However, Quentin Durham argues that there is no such thing as objective testing or grading. With wit and clarity, "The Realities of Classroom Testing and Grading" suggests that all…
Descriptors: Testing, Grading, Tests, Objective Tests
Kimmel, Ernest W. – 1997
Large-scale testing programs are generally based on the assumptions that the test-takers experience standard conditions for taking the test and that everyone will do his or her own work without having prior knowledge of specific questions. These assumptions are not necessarily true. The ways students and educators use to get around standardizing…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Achievement Tests, Cheating, Computer Assisted Testing
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