Title: Cheating in the Digital Age
1Cheating in the Digital Age
- Bob JensenEmeritus Professor of
AccountingTrinity University in San Antonio 190
Sunset Hill RoadSugar Hill, NH 03586 - 603-823-8482rjensen_at_trinity.edu
- http//www.trinity.edu/rjensen /
2Key Jensen Web Sites
- Cheating --- http//www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Plagia
rism.htm Local Link --- ..\..\plagiarsm.htm - Assessment --- http//www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Asse
ss.htm Local Link --- ..\..\assess.htm
3(No Transcript)
454 of Accounting Majors Cheat
- 54 of Accounting Students Admit to Cheating
SmartPros, August 31, 2007 ---
http//accounting.smartpros.com/x58970.xml - Accounting majors are just as likely to cheat in
college as other business students, according to
a new study. - The academic study -- titled Do Accounting
Students Cheat? A Study Examining Undergraduate
Accounting Students' Honesty and Perceptions of
Dishonest Behavior -- surveyed 569 undergraduate
business majors, including 294 undergraduate
accounting students, from seven universities in
Georgia, Mississippi and Texas.
554 of Accounting Majors Cheat
- The study set out to find out if students who
were accounting majors were as likely to cheat or
act in an academically dishonest manner as were
students with other business majors. - The authors of the study, David E. Morris of
North Georgia College State University, and
Claire McCarty Kilian of the University of
Wisconsin at River Falls, found that 54 percent
of the accounting students they surveyed admitted
to cheating, compared to 52 percent of business
majors overall
6"MBAs most likely to cheat," India Times,
September 22, 2006 --- http//timesofindia.indiati
mes.com/articleshow/2018004.cms
- BOSTON Graduate business students in the United
States and Canada are more likely to cheat on
their work than their counterparts in other
academic fields, the author of a research paper
said on Wednesday. - The study of 5,300 graduate students in the
United States and Canada found that 56 per cent
of graduate business students admitted to
cheating in the past year, with many saying they
cheated because they believed it was an accepted
practice in business. - Following business students, 54 per cent of
graduate engineering students admitted to
cheating, as did 50 per cent of physical science
students, 49 per cent of medical and health-care
students
7Selected Illustrations
- The University of Virginia has expelled one
student for plagiarism after a computer program
caught him in the act. More than 100 cases are
still pending "Plagiarist Booted Others Wait,"
by Katie Dean--- http//www.wired.com/news/culture
/0,1284,45802,00.html - Cheating Scandal in the Fuqua School of Business
at Duke UniversityIn the biggest cheating
scandal ever at Duke Universitys business
school, 34 students are facing penalties for
collaborating on exam answers, The News
Observer of Raleigh reported. Nine students face
expulsion, while others face a range of
penalties, including one-year suspensions from
the MBA program. Inside Higher Ed, April 30,
2007 --- http//www.insidehighered.com/news/2007/0
4/30/qt The ABC News account on May 1, 2007 is
at http//abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory?id3105733
8Selected Illustrations
- "Both Sides of Kenan-Flagler MBAs run around
like frantic idiots but are courted by huge
companies as rock stars. It is no surprise that
this combination of frenzy and entitlement leads
to cheating," by Danvers Fleury, Business Week,
June 24, 2007 --- http//www.businessweek.com/bsc
hools/content/jun2007/bs20070624_280134.htm?link_p
ositionlink2Â - Ohio University has sent letters to more than 50
people who earned masters degrees with material
believed to be plagiarized, asking them to return
their degrees, rewrite their theses, or demand a
hearing, The Athens News reported. In May the
university found rampant and flagrant
plagiarism among some graduate students in its
mechanical engineering department.Inside Higher
Ed, July 19, 2006 --- http//www.insidehighered.co
m/news/2006/07/19/qt
9Two of Bob Jensens Cheaters
- I had one student who submitted a paper with such
fine writing I suspected cheating. Using Google,
I found where the paper was entirely pasted from
three different sources. He was the CEO of a
small company, and his only argument was that he
hired one of his employees to write his paper.
The employee was the one who plagiarized. My
student still got an F for cheating. - I had a graduating senior who, in his last
semester, cheated and got an F from me and did
not graduate on schedule even though his parents
were in town for the graduation ceremony. They
hired an attorney and confronted me and the
university with a threatened lawsuit. When a
vice-president of the university explained the
facts of life about such lawsuits the student
dropped the case and pleaded for some way to take
the course over from me in the summer.
10Another of Bob Jensens Cheaters
- I do not allow students to use cell phones or
other gadgets (e.g., PDAs or Blackberries) during
examination. One of my graduate students went to
the bathroom during a final examination. I caught
him using a cell phone and gave him an F because
the conversation on the phone was about
examination content. - Another professor, a tax professor, was
suspicious of this student and his buddy when
they went to the bathroom several times during an
examination. At the bottom of a trash can in the
bathroom, this professor found a hidden textbook.
11Other Illustrations
12Major Problems in the Digital Age
- Internet search engines have made it both easier
to find modules to plagiarize and to cut and
paste modules without even having to actually
read those modules. - Students write papers in digital files that can
be stored and plagiarized by future students
(e.g., fraternity brothers). - Companies exist that, for a fee, will both
research and write papers on a vast array of
topics,"B-Schools Take on Essay Consultants," by
Rob Capriccioso, Inside Higher Ed, February 6,
2006
13Hired Guns for Cheating
- SchoolSucks.com --- http//www.schoolsucks.com/Â
- Termpapers R Us --- http//www.termpapersrus.com/Â
- CheatHouse.com --- http//www.cheathouse.com/
(Free papers) - PaperWizards.com --- http//www.paperwizards.com/Â
14Major Problems in the Digital Age
- Students taking examinations on a computer may
actually communicate with other persons by such
things as instant messaging during examinations. - Gadgets like cell phones (including ones with
cameras), PDAs, Blackberries, and even digital
watches make it easier to cheat. - Some students have pasted crib notes on the back
sides of labels on water bottles. Tiny, tiny
fonts become readable when views through the
water of the bottle.
15Major Problems in the Digital Age
- Examinations and homework solutions are now
stored on computers. Some students are very good
at hacking into systems. Countless times
professors are not even aware that their
examination and homework files have been
compromised. - Students have become increasingly skilled at
hacking into files of the Registrar and use these
skills to change course grades for themselves and
for their friends.
16Major Problems in the Digital Age
- Over 80 of students cheated in clever ways while
they were in high school. They come into college
believing that cheating is just being street
smart. - The increased focus on grade averages for college
admission and employment opportunities have made
grades the primary focus of most students. This
obsession with grades increases motivations to
cheat for higher grades. - Some parents are so concerned about grades of
their children that the parents themselves
condone cheating.
17Major Problems in the Digital Age
- Parents will sometimes give students money to
hire experts or top students to write papers and
take-home examinations for their children.
Admission essays are sometimes not the work of
students applying for admission. - With large classes or online classes, surrogates
may be hired to take examinations. - Being street smart is deemed more important than
being a scholar.
18Major Problems in the Digital Age
- Faculty are reluctant to take action against
suspected cheaters. In a 1999 survey of over
1,000 faculty on 21 campuses, one-third of those
who were aware of student cheating in their
course in the last two years, did nothing to
address it. Students suggest that cheating is
higher in courses where it is well known that
faculty members are likely to ignore
cheating.Quoted from the research of Donald L.
McCabe of Rutgers University (founder and first
president of CAI) - The Age of Litigation increases faculty and
college administrator paranoia.
19Major Problems in the Digital Age
- Faculty that attract large numbers of students
are sometimes rewarded for their popularity.
However, in some cases they may be popular
because they are week in detecting and/or
punishing cheating. - Faculty have become paranoid about teaching
evaluations. Evidence shows that teaching
evaluations have led to grade inflation and
concerns with popularity rather than student
scholarship.
20Major Problems in the Digital Age
21Tricks to Control Cheating
- Be very clear in the course syllabus about what
constitutes cheating and what happens to cheaters
in the course. - Point to your colleges honor code and/or
procedures for dealing with cheating incidents. - Stress the importance of integrity and
professionalism both in college and in life after
college. - Make students sign pledges on papers and
examinations.
22Tricks to Control Cheating
- Use completely or slightly different versions of
problems or questions. - Point to video cameras in classrooms or other
test sites.Better yet use those cameras. - Verify student IDs and compare faces with
pictures. - Forbid students to leave the test site
unaccompanied during an examination. - Ban gadgets, including wrist watches and PDAs.
Check backsides of water bottle labels.
23Tricks to Control Cheating
- Enforce cheating detection and punishment
policies. - Encourage students to report cheating even if the
whistleblowers remain anonymous. Cheaters
generally repeat what they think are successful
ploys. - Verify that special needs students are really
special needs students certified by college
counselors.
24Tricks to Control Cheating
25Tricks to Control Plagiarism
- Announce that some (unspecified) software to
detect plagiarism will be used for each submitted
paper or take home examination. - The easiest first step is to used the Advanced
Search option in Google and/or Yahoo. Beyond that
are the various commercial services, one or more
of which might be available in your college. - Require all submissions to be MS Doc/Excel or
similar files and announce that all works
submitted in previous semesters are stored for
comparative purposes in college files.
26Software to Detect Plagiarism
- Comparisons --- http//www.educause.edu/ir/library
/pdf/SER07017B.pdf Local Link ---
..\PlagiarismDetection.pdf - Turnitin
- MyDropBox
- PAIRwise
- Others
27Tricks to Control Plagiarism
28Cheating Issues Somewhat Unique to Distance
Education
- Greater ability to fake presence at exams,
forums, chat rooms, and team projects with
surrogate (paid) experts or friends. - Greater ability to use cheating materials not
allowed in onsite examinations.
29Combating Online Cheating
- Outside proctoring of some type. In the early
days of correspondence schools in the U.K. it was
the village vicar. - Sylvan or related nearby testing centers.
- Webcams
30Gray Zones
- Authors, including professors, often pay writing
experts to turn rough drafts into well-written
finished products. Although the rough drafts may
not be plagiarized, hired writing or even content
consultants may then turn the rough work into
polished works. This is accepted in academe and
the media. Whether or not it is ethical students
in an education environment is one of those gray
zones where being a student is unique from being
on-the-job. - People we respect for ethics, such as the clergy,
often plagiarize ideas and even entire sermons.
These ministers, priests, and rabbis contend that
the message is what is important, and they will
deliver the best and most entertaining message
possible.
31Useful Links
- The Center for Academic Integrity is affiliated
with the Kenan Institute for Ethics at Clemson
University --- http//www.academicintegrity.org/
(Note the CAI Assessment Guide for a campus) - Useful Links --- http//www.academicintegrity.org/
useful_links/index.php Applied Ethics Resources
on WWW(Maintained by the Center of Applied
Ethics, this site is organized by categories such
as business ethics, media ethics, computer
ethics, and ethical/moral decision-making.) - Association for Moral Education
- Association for Student Judicial Affairs
- Canadian Resource for Professional Ethics
32Useful Links
- The Center for the Study of Ethics in the
ProfessionsIllinois Institute of Technology - CHARACTER COUNTS!
- Character Education Center
- The Character Education Partnership
- College and Character
- CollegeValues.org
- Creating a Code of Ethics for Your Organization
33Useful Links
- Stanford Center on Ethics
- Electronic Reference Formats Recommended by the
American Psychological Association - Emory University's Center for Ethics
- Ethics Center for Engineering Science(Case
Western Reserve University has organized this
site to include engineering ethics, research
ethics, corporate ethics and solving problems.)
34Useful Links
- Ethics on the World Wide Web(The School of
Communications at California State University,
Fullerton, provides this site, which has many
listings in areas such as military ethics, sports
ethics, medical ethics, and legal ethics.) - Ethics Resource Center
- Ethics Updates(Updates on current literature,
both popular and professional, pertaining to
ethics in areas of ethical theory, applied
ethics, and case studies. - Institute for Global Ethics(This is an
independent, nonprofit organization dedicated to
elevating public awareness and promoting the
discussion of ethics in a global context.)
35Useful Links
- Joint Services Conference on Professional Ethics
(JSCOPE)(JSCOPE is an organization of military
professionals, academics and others formed to
discuss ethical issues relevant to the Military.)
- Josephson Institute
- The Kenan Institute for Ethics(The Kenan
Institute for Ethics at Duke University provides
this site. The KIE provides a strong focus on
ethics at Duke University in teaching, training,
research, and everyday life by inspiring personal
integrity and civic commitment.) - National Association of Student Personnel
Administrators - The Official Site of the National Collegiate
Athletic Association
36Useful Links
- The Practical Ethics Center
- Society for Values in Higher Education
- United States Air Force Academy Center for
Character Development - United States Department of Education
37Key Jensen Web Sites
- Cheating --- http//www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Plagia
rism.htm Local Link --- ..\..\plagiarsm.htm - Assessment --- http//www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Asse
ss.htm Local Link --- ..\..\assess.htm
38The End