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Benedictine University

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Title: Benedictine University


1
  • Benedictine University
  • Promoting Academic Integrity
  • Don McCabe Rutgers University

2
Presentation Agenda
  • Overview of research
  • Identifying some issues
  • Some suggestions for change

3
Research Chronology 1990 to 2007
  • College
  • Have surveyed 165,00 students at 160 schools
  • Have surveyed 18,000 faculty at 110 schools
  • Honor codes were an early focus now modified
    codes
  • High School
  • Over 35,000 students at 70 schools
  • Have also surveyed a small number of faculty
  • Hope to expand this work

4
Methodological issues
  • Self-report data
  • Anonymity concerns with web-based surveys
    leading to lower response rates and lower
    self-reported cheating?
  • Changing definition of cheating???

5
2002-2007 Surveys
  • Canada
  • Students, faculty, TAs, first year students
  • 16 participating schools
  • United States
  • Students, faculty, TAs, first year students
  • 102 participating schools

6
Respondents
  • U.S Canada
  • Undergraduate 82,186 25,352
  • Graduate 13,327 2,593
  • Other 515 352
  • Unknown 1,864 519
  • --------------------------------------------------
    --------------
  • Faculty 14,597 2,560

7
Respondents
  • U.S Benedictine
  • Undergraduate 82,186 471
  • Graduate 13,327 12
  • Other 515 0
  • Unknown 1,864 15
  • --------------------------------------------------
    --------------
  • Faculty 14,597 94 (50 FT)

8
Institutional factors associated with greater
cheating
  • Cheating is campus norm (cheating culture)
  • School has no honor code
  • When students feel faculty dont support
    integrity policies, there is little chance of
    getting caught and, even if you are, penalties
    are not seen as significant (Ditto Benedictine)

9
Students reporting greater cheating
  • Business Communications majors
  • Males report more test cheating, but females are
    closing the gap females report slightly more
    cheating on written work except most explicit
  • Students with low or high grade point averages?
  • Those with significant time commitments e.g.,
    caring for dependent, job, athletics
  • Fraternity/sorority members to a moderate degree

10
BenU students reporting greater cheating
  • Business (test_at_36) Education (written_at_55)
  • Females slightly higher on both test cheating and
    cheating on written work but not significant
  • Students with average GPAs?
  • No strong pattern for those caring for dependent,
    with job, participating in athletics
  • Fraternity/sorority members to a moderate degree

11
Self-reported cheating
  • U.S.
    Canada
  • UG Grad UG
    Grad
  • Test Cheating 22 10 18
    10
  • Written Cheating 42 27
    45 31
  • (48) (32) (52)
    (35)
  • N 82,186 13,327 25,352 2,593

12
U.S. Undergraduates
  • 2002/7 Benedictine
  • Test Cheating 22 24
  • Written Cheating 42 37
  • (48) (43)
  • N 82,186 471

13
Plagiarism Undergraduates
  • 2002/7 Benedictine
  • Written cut paste 36 32
  • Written plagiarism 6 4
  • Internet cut paste 36 31
  • Internet plagiarism 3 2
  • (e.g., paper mills)

14
Other notable BenU differences
  • BenU greater (p
  • More BenU students (43 vs. 30) report learning
    from another student what was on a test s/he will
    take later
  • More BenU students (51 vs. 42) report working
    with others on an assignment when specifically
    asked for individual work

15
Student motivations for cheating
  • Pressure to succeed/excel.
  • Fairness (Others do it.)
  • Material is trivial/irrelevant.
  • Courses too hard/faculty unreasonable.
  • Sense of entitlement seems important.
  • Emulating business practice.

16
Motivations for not cheating
  • The peer environment on campus because
    students are most affected by the social
    environment around them.
  • Self respect. Upbringing (values morals).
  • The consequences for cheating or dishonesty.
  • Desire to truly learn.

17
Some suggested solutions - BenU
  • Eliminate College Physics Web CT quizzes. It is
    just too easy to cheat on those.
  • Faculty should take better notice during exams.
  • Actually enforce the policies rather than just
    expecting the students to abide them.
  • Cheating during tests should be reported, but the
    students will probably never do that. So that
    leaves it up to the instructor.

18
Some suggested solutions - BenU
  • Help us learn how to properly site
    sources!!!!!!!!!!!
  • I believe that the faculty should enforce the
    academic honesty policy more strictly
  • I don't think any changes would make a
    difference. Students will always find a way to
    cheat.
  • I believe BU has, overall, an excellent standard
    of academic honesty

19
Faculty

20
How faculty students learn of policy
  • Undergrads Faculty
  • U.S. Benedictine U.S.
    Benedictine
  • Faculty 63 69 41
    40
  • Handbook 25 27
    51 36
  • Orientation 18 15
    25 20
  • Note Students - noting they learned
    a lot from the source.
  • Faculty - who used source,
    no rating of how much learned.

21
Sources of information - BenU faculty
  • Full-time Adjuncts
  • Faculty 60 18
  • Campus website 52 30
  • Handbook 48 26
  • Chair 36 61
  • Orientation 20 21

22
Faculty safeguards Lost opportunity?
  • Change exams regularly 69
  • Monitor students closely on tests 70
  • Info in syllabus about cheating 66
  • Discuss views on integrity 65
  • Internet to confirm plagiarism 24
  • Range 8 to 63 in US. 7 of 96 US schools at
    40 or above.

23
Faculty safeguards Lost opportunity?
  • Change exams regularly 69 (71)
  • Monitor students closely on tests 70 (81)
  • Info in syllabus about cheating 66 (71)
  • Discuss views on integrity 65 (73)
  • Internet to confirm plagiarism 24 (29)

24
Faculty safeguards Benedictine FT(PT)
  • Change exams regularly 78 (64)
  • Monitor students closely on tests 88 (73)
  • Info in syllabus about cheating 82 (59)
  • Discuss views on integrity 80 (66)
  • Internet to confirm plagiarism 32 (25)

25
Faculty role My view
  • We must remain vigilant at least out of a sense
    of fairness for honest students.
  • Students seem to want some change we need to
    encourage them.
  • More faculty need to come forward. (40 in US
    ignore some cases)
  • Key issue Whats the right balance among
    promotion, deterrence and punishment?

26
Faculty role Your view
  • Change exams and course assignments more often.
  • Faculty owe it to honest students to do all in
    their power to prevent cheating...
  • Faculty should make their expectations clear to
    students.
  • Talk to students talk about the effect of
    dishonesty in their future careers

27
Faculty role Your view
  • Faculty members should make a big deal about
    academic honesty in all their classes
  • As instructors we need to be clear in our
    expectations.
  • Many faculty and department chairs do not want to
    be hassled with the appeal process and avoid
    reporting cases. Faculty need to be more
    pro-active about the academic honesty problem on
    campus.

28
  • Ten (Updated) Principles of Academic Integrity
  • McCabe Pavela
  • May/June 2004
  • Principles of academic integrity for faculty.

29
Selected principles
  • Encourage student responsibility for academic
    integrity.
  • Clarify expectations for students.
  • Develop fair and creative forms of assessment.
  • Respond to academic dishonesty when it occurs.

30
Other faculty strategies
  • Multiple versions of exams/assignments.
  • Talk about internet, including detection
    strategies.
  • Outlaw electronic devices in tests.
  • Listen to students understand their needs and
    concerns.

31
Suggested institutional strategies
  • Programs based on notions of ethical community
    building which form basis of culture of
    integrity and responsibility.
  • Faculty staff should engage students in ongoing
    dialogue (throughout program) which helps build
    community of trust.
  • Culture should emphasize clear communication of
    rules, moral socialization, etc. the hidden
    curriculum.

32
Suggested institutional strategies
  • Student involvement is key. Give them a primary
    role orientation, hearing boards, etc. Give
    them ownership let them build a new tradition.
  • Honor codes are increasingly a part of ethical
    community building strategies. Modified codes
    hold promise in this regard.
  • Key is for both institution and its faculty to
    act failure to act sends powerful message.

33
Questions/Comments?
34
(No Transcript)
35
  • Benedictine University
  • Promoting Academic Integrity
  • Part II
  • Don McCabe Rutgers University

36
Presentation Agenda
  • Brief overview of research
  • Identifying issues specific to Benedictine
  • Discussion about possible change

37
2002-2007 Surveys
  • Canada
  • Students, faculty, TAs, first year students
  • 16 participating schools
  • United States
  • Students, faculty, TAs, first year students
  • 102 participating schools

38
Methodological issues
  • Self-report data
  • Anonymity concerns with web-based surveys
    leading to lower response rates and lower
    self-reported cheating?
  • Changing definition of cheating???

39
Respondents
  • U.S Benedictine
  • Undergraduate 82,186 471
  • Graduate 13,327 12
  • Other 515 0
  • Unknown 1,864 15
  • --------------------------------------------------
    --------------
  • Faculty 14,597 94 (50 FT)

40
Institutional factors associated with greater
cheating
  • Cheating is campus norm (cheating culture)
  • School has no honor code
  • When students feel faculty dont support
    integrity policies, there is little chance of
    getting caught and, even if you are, penalties
    are not seen as significant (Ditto Benedictine)

41
Students reporting greater cheating
  • Business Communications majors - Business
    (test_at_36) Education (written_at_55)
  • Males report more test cheating, but females are
    closing the gap females report slightly more
    cheating on written work except most explicit
    Females higher on both, but NS
  • Students with low or high grade point averages?
    Reverse?
  • Those with significant time commitments e.g.,
    caring for dependent, job, athletics No
    significant pattern
  • Fraternity/sorority members to a moderate degree
    - Same

42
U.S. Undergraduates
  • 2002/7 Benedictine
  • Test Cheating 22 24
  • Written Cheating 42 37
  • (48) (43)
  • N 82,186 471

43
Other notable BenU differences
  • More BenU students (43 vs. 30) report learning
    from another student what was on a test s/he will
    take later.
  • More BenU students (51 vs. 42) report working
    with others on an assignment when specifically
    asked for individual work.
  • BenU students generally report less plagiarism
    (e.g., cut paste from Internet - 31 vs.
    36).

44
Student motivations for cheating
  • Pressure to succeed/excel.
  • Fairness (Others do it.)
  • Material is trivial/irrelevant.
  • Courses too hard/faculty unreasonable.
  • Sense of entitlement seems important.
  • Emulating business practice.

45
Faculty

46
Sources of information - BenU faculty
  • Full-time Adjuncts
  • Faculty 60 18
  • Campus website 52 30
  • Handbook 48 26
  • Chair 36 61
  • Orientation 20 21

47
Faculty safeguards Benedictine FT(PT)
  • Change exams regularly 78 (64)
  • Monitor students closely on tests 88 (73)
  • Info in syllabus about cheating 82 (59)
  • Discuss views on integrity 80 (66)
  • Internet to confirm plagiarism 32 (25)
  • (Benedictine generally above the U.S. means.)

48
Faculty role My view
  • We must remain vigilant at least out of a sense
    of fairness for honest students.
  • Students seem to want some change we need to
    encourage them.
  • More faculty need to come forward. (40 in US
    ignore some cases)
  • Key issue Whats the right balance among
    promotion, deterrence and punishment?

49
Faculty role Your view
  • Change exams and course assignments more often.
  • Faculty owe it to honest students to do all in
    their power to prevent cheating...
  • Faculty should make their expectations clear to
    students.
  • Talk to students talk about the effect of
    dishonesty in their future careers

50
Faculty role Your view
  • Faculty members should make a big deal about
    academic honesty in all their classes
  • As instructors we need to be clear in our
    expectations.
  • Many faculty and department chairs do not want to
    be hassled with the appeal process and avoid
    reporting cases. Faculty need to be more
    pro-active about the academic honesty problem on
    campus.

51
  • Ten (Updated) Principles of Academic Integrity
  • McCabe Pavela
  • May/June 2004
  • Principles of academic integrity for faculty.

52
Selected principles
  • Encourage student responsibility for academic
    integrity.
  • Clarify expectations for students.
  • Develop fair and creative forms of assessment.
  • Respond to academic dishonesty when it occurs.

53
Other faculty strategies
  • Multiple versions of exams/assignments.
  • Talk about internet, including detection
    strategies.
  • Outlaw electronic devices in tests.
  • Listen to students understand their needs and
    concerns.

54
Suggested institutional strategies
  • Programs based on notions of ethical community
    building which form basis of culture of
    integrity and responsibility.
  • Faculty staff should engage students in ongoing
    dialogue (throughout program) which helps build
    community of trust.
  • Culture should emphasize clear communication of
    rules, moral socialization, etc. the hidden
    curriculum.

55
Suggested institutional strategies
  • Student involvement is key. Give them a primary
    role orientation, hearing boards, etc. Give
    them ownership let them build a new tradition.
  • Honor codes are increasingly a part of ethical
    community building strategies. Modified codes
    hold promise in this regard.
  • Key is for both institution and its faculty to
    act failure to act sends powerful message.

56
Specific BenU Issues
57
BenU Faculty Comments - Reporting
  • All cheating must be reported so that students
    who cheat habitually or in several courses
    receive more serious consequences.
  • More feedback on process allow departments
    access to files of repeat offenders when
    recommendation letters are requested.
  • Report sanctions in the student paper, obscuring
    names of those involved, to show that honesty is
    watched, violators caught, and egregious
    offenders punished.
  • Need more faculty discussion to develop a common
    mind about the problem.

58
BenU Faculty Comments - Adjuncts
  • Better training for the adjunct faculty who are
    not as familiar with the procedures of the
    policy (Adjunct)
  • We need a mechanism to educate the mass of
    adjunct faculty and bring them into this
    discussion. (Professor)
  • Make policies clearer to adjunct faculty and
    perhaps hold workshops. (Assoc. Professor)

59
BenU Faculty Comments - Miscellany
  • Support of faculty pursuing penalties needs to be
    absolute. There should be no occurrences, and no
    live rumors, of decisions being overturned for
    money or political reasons.
  • There needs to be more transparency in the
    judicial process. If I report a student for
    cheating, it is VERY important that I know about
    the outcome.
  • Benedictine desperately needs to subscribe to a
    service like turnitin.com.

60
BenU Faculty Comments - Code
  • Implement honor code and student council.
  • Institute an Honor Code like many universities
    have, and a student judicial board to
    investigate, prosecute, and punish cheaters. Make
    it easier to turn in cheaters.
  • Institute an honor code that all students are
    required to learn and subscribe to, then have
    students responsible for the judicial process.

61
BenU Student Comments Be stricter
  • I think if someone is caught cheating in any way,
    it should be an automatic F in the class. NO
    EXCEPTIONS!
  • I think my school's policies regarding cheating
    are proper, but they are scarcely if ever
    enforced, which needs to be changed.
  • I think that the school should adhere to its own
    policies.
  • Assignments need to be changed every year re
    older siblings and friends.

62
BenU Student Comments Be stricter
  • I would like to see professors pay more attention
    when students are taking exams
  • It would be nice to see those students who cheat
    actually removed from the class rather than given
    a slap on the wrist.
  • Punish students who initiate cheating.
  • I believe that the faculty should enforce the
    academic honesty policy more strictly

63
BenU Students Need to change tests
  • I think it's unfair that some students have old
    exams and some don't its an unfair advantage!
  • Assignments need to be changed every year,
    because people who have older siblings or friends
    already have all the work, and have an unfair
    advantage over other students.
  • Change the tests/quiz for every sections of the
    same class on the same day.
  • If teachers are making the same exams, that is
    their fault.

64
BenU Students Cheating common
  • I think cheating is a huge problem because
    teachers "turn a blind eye" because they do not
    want to "offend" anybody.
  • I think cheating is out of control at BU. I had a
    class last year that had a group of students
    cheating repeatedly, and the instructor knew. He
    gave lectures almost every class about the
    importance of integrity, and tried to pursue
    consequences for the group of dishonest students.
    Apparently, he was later fired for
    "discrimination" against these students. What
    kind of message does that give to those who are
    cheating?

65
BenU Students Cheating common
  • Cheating is a problem at Benedictine!
  • It is amazing how much cheating goes on at
    Benedictine that passes by.
  • It is rare to find people that do not cheat here
    at BU.
  • It seems that cheating on exams is getting worse
    with the younger classes.
  • The school is full of cheating.

66
BenU Students Science a problem
  • It is obvious in the science classes. Some
    professors realize this and try to change tests,
    but it still happens in class.
  • I think that in the Science department there is a
    great deal of cheating going on to the detriment
    of the honest students!
  • The science department in particular is a
    department full of cheating students. As someone
    worried about the future of health care falling
    into cheating hands, it is advisable the science
    department take immediate action to prevent
    mediocre doctors entering the workforce.

67
BenU Students Not a problem
  • Doing a great job. No specific changes that I
    can think of are needed.
  • I do not see the need for much change in the way
    of academic integrity.
  • I feel that the Instructors are doing a good job
    at maintaining academic integrity.
  • IT is almost non evident at Benedictine. Teachers
    are doing a great job.

68
BenU Students Unlikely to report
  • I think it is the individuals job to support his
    or her own academic integrity, no one elses.
  • Students always have and always will look the
    other way no one likes a snitch. Would you
    advocate ratting out someones friends? Lay off
    the students and don't expect more of them than
    their capable of giving.
  • Students should not be responsible for what other
    students do.
  • Cheating is rampant but students are afraid to
    get a fellow student in trouble, whether they're
    a friend or not.

69
BenU Students Support reporting
  • I think that students should be more vigilant in
    reporting people that do cheat.
  • I believe students should have more of a
    responsibility to monitor the cheating because
    they are the one's that are doing the cheating
    and they know how it works.
  • I think it is up to the students to look out when
    cheating takes place, and if they do not report
    it then they should talk to the student about
    what they saw being taken place.
  • Students should worry about themselves and let
    the system take care of itself.

70
BenU Students Miscellaneous comments
  • sometimes you just have to get help in order to
    meet the demands of career, life, school and
    society.
  • If anything there should be a survey given out to
    teachers about grade inflation.
  • Somebody please stop the Muslim and Indian kids
    from cheating, I bust my butt for decent grades
    and some just coast into med school because some
    of them cheat badly.
  • I believe the school should play a more active
    role in informing students about what cheating is
    and what are the consequences of cheating.

71
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