how should we respond to plagiarism and other forms of academic misconduct?

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How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

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How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?. On-Going National Conversation with Sense Problem is Growing. Nationally – 70-80% of undergraduates say they have cheated. Reasons Often Mentioned. Internet access to papers and information Pressure to succeed - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

Page 2: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

On-Going National Conversation with Sense Problem is Growing

• Nationally – – 70-80% of undergraduates say they have cheated

Page 3: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

Reasons Often Mentioned

• Internet access to papers and information• Pressure to succeed• Sense peers are doing it• Belief that there is low chance of getting

caught– And punishment is minimal

Page 4: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

Why Did You Cheat or Plagiarize (CSB/SJU)

• 45.2% Under time constraints• 44.2% Wanted to get good grade• 31.8% Pressured to help friend• 27.9% Easy to cheat• 25.9% What some consider cheating, I

don’t• 21.8% I didn’t think I would get caught

– SJU 27.2%; CSB 17.4%

Page 5: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

CSB/SJU

• How frequently do you think plagiarism occurs at your institution?– 14.1% “always/often”– 46.0% “occasionally”– 37.6% “rarely”– 2.1% “never”

Page 6: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

CSB-SJU

• How frequently do you think cheating on tests occurs?– 9.0% “always/often”– 35.8% “occasionally”– 49.65% “rarely”– 5.4% “never”

Page 7: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

Have You Ever Been Informed about the Academic Integrity or Cheating

Policies?

• 88.8% -- Yes• 4.9% -- No• 6.1% -- Don’t remember

• 87% say they learned in classes

Page 8: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

Academic Dishonesty Filings with Dean – SJU only

• 2007-8 22 (9/13)• 2008-9 23 (12/11)• 2009-10 39 (32/7)• 2010-11 42 (25/17)• 2011-12 39 (23/16)

Page 9: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

FY Students (?) v. Others

• 94 of 165 cases (57%) were in 100 level courses

• 55 of the 94 cases (58%) in 100 level courses were in the Fall

Page 10: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

Filers by Area- 100 level coursesF2007-S2012 (SJU only)

• THEO 111 29• CSCI 1xx 13• FYS 1xx 11• PHIL 1xx 10• HIST 1xx 8• ACFN 114 3• BIOL 1xx 3• 11 other 14

Page 11: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

Old Plagiarism Policy

• “Plagiarism can result from either deliberate dishonesty or ignorance of citational procedures. Deliberate plagiarism is especially serious and warrants more severe sanctions, but even plagiarism based on ignorance of procedures is a punishable offense, especially when it occurs more than once.”

Page 12: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

New -- Distinction between Academic Misconduct and Poor Scholarship

• PS – “inadequate understanding of scholarly conventions…or inability to implement those conventions…”

• AM – “…by the intent to deceive, by gross verbatim use or limited alteration of another’s work accompanied by explicit or implicit claims that the work is the student’s own…”

Page 13: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

Penalty for Poor Scholarship in New Policy

• “An appropriate penalty, therefore, is the same as for any other situation in which students fail to achieve the goals of a course: a reduced grade for the assignment in question and further instruction to remedy the deficiencies demonstrated by the student.”

Page 14: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

Reactions to new policy?

• Improvement?

• Concerns?

• Grey areas?

Page 15: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

How Do We Know the Difference?

• If a student lifts a couple of sentences from the class text with no quotation marks, is that poor scholarship or “gross verbatim use…of another’s work accompanied by explicit or implicit claims the work is the student’s own?”

Page 16: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

What Should We Do with First Time Poor Scholarship Offender

• Recommendation is lower grade and re-teach

Page 17: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

What Should with Next Offense?

• What if the student turns in another paper with poor scholarship in the same class?

• What if in a subsequent class of ours?

Page 18: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

Questions Prior to Declaring Academic Misconduct

• Has the student received instruction in the Institution’s policy and how to avoid misconduct, plagiarism, and poor scholarship?

• Was there intent to deceive?• Does the incident represent a pattern of

misconduct?• Was the incident sufficiently egregious to

warrant penalty?

Page 19: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

Suggestions for Countering the Problem

• Affirm value of academic integrity• Don’t tempt them• Clarify what is acceptable, esp group work• Develop meaningful assignments, engage

students

• Negative aspects of hard line stance (Karon)

Page 20: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

Teach it!

• Resources – Fostering Integrity in Research Page– http://libguides.csbsju.edu/research_integrity

• FYS Plagiarism Power Point

Page 21: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

Papers Based on Class Material

• Make paper topic course/reading specific– Emphasize need to integrate class

readings/discussion into answer

• Change some readings and/or question or re-arrange prompt so old versions don’t fit

Page 22: How Should We Respond to Plagiarism and Other Forms of Academic Misconduct?

Research Paper

• Avoid “do it and turn it in”• Topics connected directly to specific class

– Faculty approval– Do not allow late change

• Require results in stages– Thesis statement, lit review/bibliography, outline,

draft