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PLAGIARISM The OIAs experience Ruth Deech

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Student was withdrawn from course after being accused of ... Expunge charge from the record. Allow resubmission. Pay compensation. Reform university procedures ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PLAGIARISM The OIAs experience Ruth Deech


1
PLAGIARISMThe OIAs experienceRuth Deech
Michael Reddy
2
The OIA Scheme
  • Some statistics

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Complaints about plagiarism disciplinary
offences
  • Over 100 cases since April 2004
  • About one third involve plagiarism

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The plagiarism case
  • Student was withdrawn from course after being
    accused of plagiarism
  • He alleged it was scientific collaboration and he
    had misunderstood the permitted amount
  • He alleged the penalty was too harsh

14
Plagiarism decision
  • Students had been specifically warned against
    plagiarism but he had not read the Handbook
  • Student had not raised queries with his professor
  • There was no evidence of collaboration
  • The penalty was within the universitys
    guidelines
  • Complaint not justified

15
OIA Plagiarism
  • Impact of plagiarism and determination are issues
    of academic judgment
  • Has the university applied its regulations and
    followed its procedures?
  • Is the decision by the university reasonable in
    all the circumstances?

16
What is academic judgement?
  • A decision about scholarship that only a
    suitably experienced academic can make
  • So decisions about whether plagiarism has
    occurred and the assessment of plagiarised work
    are matters of academic judgement
  • But the OIA will look at questions about
    fairness and procedural irregularity

17
Academic offences
  • OIA will look at complaints about the
    universitys academic offences procedures
  • Have they been followed properly, no material
    breaches?
  • The more severe the punishment, the more closely
    the procedures will be checked
  • Have they been applied fairly, not arbitrarily?
  • Do procedures comply with natural justice, human
    rights and general consideration of equity?

18
The forgery case
  • Student is achieving well in the third year of
    his medical course
  • The university discovers that he entered with a
    forged degree certificate showing better results
    than in truth he had achieved
  • Following procedures, he is expelled immediately
  • He claims mitigating circumstances, that the
    forgery was by his mother

19
Forgery decision
  • The procedures were properly followed
  • The offence was serious enough to merit instant
    expulsion
  • Another student with better marks might have
    taken the place honesty is paramount for doctors
  • The mitigating circumstances were rightly judged
    by the university to make no difference

20
Fairness and penalties
  • Provision for mitigating circumstances
  • Inconsistent application of penalties
  • Reasons must be given by the university
  • There must be provision for an appeal

21
Mitigating circumstances
  • OIA unlikely to interfere if they have been
    properly considered
  • Special care needs to be taken over disability,
    mental health, misrepresentation by university
    official, failure to explain plagiarism to
    students, foreign students cultural issues
  • Bereavement, health, stress, financial problems,
    computer failure very common!

22
Mitigating circumstances
  • Are any mitigating circumstances acceptable in
    deciding (a) whether the student has committed
    the offence (b) the penalty?
  • Poor health?
  • Mental health?
  • Death of a relative?
  • Computer mishaps?
  • Financial difficulties?
  • Time pressures?
  • Cultural issues?

23
Procedural issues
  • Natural justice no bias, charge to be known,
    both sides to be heard
  • Bias is not prejudice, it is objective
  • No financial conflicts
  • No interested parties with previous involvement
  • Parity of representation
  • Panels legal advice available to both sides

24
Principles of fairness
  • University must give adequate notice of
    allegation
  • Adequate hearing of both sides
  • Appeal body must be and appear to be unbiased
  • Procedures should not be unreasonably delayed
  • Reasons for the decision necessary

25
Was the universitys decision fair?
  • Did the disciplinary panel consider the
    appropriate evidence?
  • What burden of proof is applicable?
  • Did the university observe natural justice?
  • Were the grounds of appeal reasonable?
  • Did the university properly consider mitigating
    circumstances?
  • Was the penalty proportionate to the offence?
  • Was the penalty consistent with other cases?

26
Relevance of other factors?
  • Extent of plagiarism?
  • Student lulled to sleep by inaction of
    university
  • Poor academic practices, such as failure to
    explain what plagiarism is and/or the
    consequences
  • First year or final year?
  • First offence?
  • Deliberate, reckless, negligent or innocent?
  • Consequences of punishment?

27
OIA remedies
  • Reconsider the complaint
  • Hold a new hearing
  • Change the penalty
  • Offer an apology
  • Expunge charge from the record
  • Allow resubmission
  • Pay compensation
  • Reform university procedures

28
Learning from complaints about disciplinary
matters
  • Monitor should have a reliable system of
    tracking complaints, including time taken for
    each stage and equal opportunities info. (QAA)
  • Review and evaluate effectiveness of
    procedures, adequacy of guidance support,
    training of staff, deal with common causes (QAA)
  • Report regularly to governing body about
    complaints
  • (QAA)
  • Seek feedback from students (BS ISO)
  • Publish information about complaints
    (OIA)

29
New issues
  • Are we looking after our overseas students?
  • Language difficulties and cultural background
  • Relevance of mitigating circumstances and their
    proof
  • Previous similar cases
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