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Ethics and Integrity in Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Education: The Problem of Academic Dishonesty Academic Dishonesty Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick Department of Philosophy CNH 411-I 407-823-5459 E-mail: [email protected]

Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Academic Dishonesty Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick Department of Philosophy CNH 411-I 407-823-5459 E-mail: [email protected]@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu

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Page 1: Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Academic Dishonesty Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick Department of Philosophy CNH 411-I 407-823-5459 E-mail: stanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edustanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu

Ethics and Integrity in Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Education: The Problem of

Academic DishonestyAcademic Dishonesty

Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick

Department of Philosophy

CNH 411-I

407-823-5459

E-mail: [email protected]

Page 2: Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Academic Dishonesty Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick Department of Philosophy CNH 411-I 407-823-5459 E-mail: stanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edustanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu

Cheating and Plagiarism

Defined:

Cheating: unauthorized assistance in graded, for-credit assignments

Plagiarism: appropriating the work of others and claiming implicitly or explicitly that it is one’s own.

Intentional and unintentional

Page 3: Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Academic Dishonesty Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick Department of Philosophy CNH 411-I 407-823-5459 E-mail: stanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edustanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu

Methods of Cheating1. High-tech methods

Internet Text beepers Cell phones PDAs and Handheld Computers Walkmans/Tapes/CDs

2. Low-tech methods Water Bottles Mirrored Glasses Body Writing The “Support” Bra Folded Paper/Leg Fans Duplicate Blue Books Phantom Students Test form replacements

Page 4: Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Academic Dishonesty Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick Department of Philosophy CNH 411-I 407-823-5459 E-mail: stanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edustanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu

Methods of Plagiarism

Internet Plagiarism Websites ~200

A Resource: Turnitin.com – see http://www.turnitin.com

Technologically Undetectable Cases – custom papers

Translations Patchwork Papers

Plagiarism the Old Fashioned Way

Page 5: Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Academic Dishonesty Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick Department of Philosophy CNH 411-I 407-823-5459 E-mail: stanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edustanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu

Causes of Academic Dishonesty

Lack of Skill, Knowledge or Preparation, Time Constraints Laziness Excessive workload Poorly defined/constructed assignments Lack of instructions, lack of appropriate assistance Competitive View of Education – see esp. Bernard Gert’s

Morality: Its Nature and Justification A theoretical orientation: Individual Ascendancy –

present orientation, hedonism, duty to self. (See Kibler, Nuss, Patterson and Pavela, 4)

Page 6: Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Academic Dishonesty Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick Department of Philosophy CNH 411-I 407-823-5459 E-mail: stanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edustanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu

Some Elements of Bernard Gert’s View of Education as a

Competitive Activity:

An Individualistic Approach

Education is Competitive; Analogy to Sports.

Cheating is Not Like Breaking a Promise.

Cheaters cheat other students and no one else.

Faculty referees

Page 7: Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Academic Dishonesty Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick Department of Philosophy CNH 411-I 407-823-5459 E-mail: stanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edustanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu

An Alternative View:A Cooperative, Community-

Based Approach to Education

Should we design our courses on a competitive model?

Should we encourage student collaboration and cooperation?

What are the limits of collaborative student activity?

Page 8: Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Academic Dishonesty Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick Department of Philosophy CNH 411-I 407-823-5459 E-mail: stanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edustanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu

Why the Competitive Model Fails

“The very stress on individualism, on competition, on achieving material success which so marks our society also generates intense pressures to cut corners” Sissela Bok, Lying: Moral Choice in Public and Private Life (New York: Vintage, 1999) 244, emphasis added.

Page 9: Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Academic Dishonesty Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick Department of Philosophy CNH 411-I 407-823-5459 E-mail: stanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edustanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu

Some Additional Considerations Regarding the

Competitive Model of Education:

What it lacks is appropriate incentive not to cheat. If education is competitive, it does not follow that the reason not to cheat is that others won’t allow you the opportunity to gain the benefits of the activity if you do. The cheater will, in that case, try to find more and better ways to cheat so as not to be caught.

Page 10: Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Academic Dishonesty Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick Department of Philosophy CNH 411-I 407-823-5459 E-mail: stanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edustanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu

Preventing Academic Dishonesty

Lower-Level Approaches

State expectations in your syllabi Explain rules of research Remind students of penalties & honor policy(ies) State clearly what is permitted and what is not permitted in your

classes

Unique Assignments

“Building Papers” an element at a time Limitations/Advantages

Conferences with students, in-class essays on papers, explanation of references

Proctor actively and avoid distractions

Beware (and be aware) of online resources

Page 11: Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Academic Dishonesty Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick Department of Philosophy CNH 411-I 407-823-5459 E-mail: stanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edustanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu

Community Versus Competition:

Thinking of education as competitive does not solve the problem of cheating. It might instead exacerbate it. The way to combat the problem of cheating is to prevent the temptation before it starts. And the way to do that is to build educational communities in which teachers and students interact with each other, not in which they act simply within the confines of an impersonal institution.

Page 12: Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Academic Dishonesty Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick Department of Philosophy CNH 411-I 407-823-5459 E-mail: stanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edustanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu

Prevention Continued: Higher Level

A Virtue Ethics Approach

Community Ascendancy – future orientation, takes responsibility, duty to others (See Kibler, Nuss, Patterson, and Pavela, 4).

Stating the rules is not enough – understanding

Punishment is not the solution

A Kantian+Communitarian view of punishment

Page 13: Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Academic Dishonesty Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick Department of Philosophy CNH 411-I 407-823-5459 E-mail: stanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edustanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu

Academic Integrity Seminars:Proactive and Reactive

See these links for the students’ course at UCF: http://pegasus.cc.ucf.edu/~stanlick/syllabi.html

Reaction to Confirmed InstancesEducational, not punitive

Forward Looking – Utilitarian/Community Oriented

Rehabilitative/Responsibility OrientedBackward Looking

RetributiveA Case of “Giving Up”

Page 14: Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Academic Dishonesty Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick Department of Philosophy CNH 411-I 407-823-5459 E-mail: stanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edustanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu

Reacting to Academic Dishonesty

Confronting the Student

Verifying Plagiarism the Old Fashioned Way

Making the Best of a Bad Thing

Page 15: Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Academic Dishonesty Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick Department of Philosophy CNH 411-I 407-823-5459 E-mail: stanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edustanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu

“Trust and integrity are precious resources, easily squandered, hard to regain. They can thrive only on a foundation of respect for veracity” (Bok, 249).

Page 16: Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Academic Dishonesty Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick Department of Philosophy CNH 411-I 407-823-5459 E-mail: stanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edustanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu

ReferencesBok, Sissela, Lying: Moral Choice in Public and Private Life (New York: Vintage Books, 1999).Gert, Bernard, Morality: Its Nature and Justification (New York: Oxford University Press, 1998).Herman, A.L., “College Cheating: A Plea for Leniency,” Journal of Higher Education, 37(5) May 1966: 260-266.Kibler, William L, Elizabeth M. Nuss,et. Al., Academic Integrity and Student Development: Legal Issues and Policy Perspectives (College Administration Publications, 1988). McCabe, Donald L, Linda K. Trevino and Kenneth D. Butterfield, “Cheating in Academic Institutions: A Decade of Research” Ethics and Behavior, 11(3), 2001: 219-232. McCabe, Donald L. and Linda K. Trevino, “Academic Dishonesty: Honor Codes and Other Contextual Influences” Journal of Higher Education, 64(5), Sep-Oct. 1993: 522-538. Noah, Harold J. and Max A. Eckstein, Fraud and Education: The Worm in the Apple (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2001).

Page 17: Ethics and Integrity in Education: The Problem of Academic Dishonesty Dr. Nancy A. Stanlick Department of Philosophy CNH 411-I 407-823-5459 E-mail: stanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edustanlick@pegasus.cc.ucf.edu

On-Line ResourcesThe Center for Academic Integrity at Duke University. UCF Writing CenterMLA, Chicago, Other Manuals through UCF Library

Plagiarism: How to Recognize it and How to Avoid it. Go to http://www.indiana.edu/~wts/wts/plagiarism.html Ethics Updates. Go to http://ethics.acusd.edu/Resources/AcademicIntegrity/Index.html