Warning over student integrity as plagiarism levels highlighted
AROUND one in three of all university students engage in some sort of plagiarism and related form of misconduct, a survey by researchers in Wales warns.
Student academic integrity is not a core concept taught to academics in higher education, the Swansea University study found.
Researchers said an academic integrity approach to addressing plagiarism emphasises promotion of positive values alongside education of staff and students about good, and bad, practice in writing, studying and assessment design.
But while the concept of academic integrity was developed many years ago and is seen as desirable, it is not clear whether it features prominently in the education of academics themselves, the study warns.
“About one third of all university students report engaging in some sort of plagiarism and related forms of misconduct,” the report finds.
“Reasons given for this misconduct vary from pressure to achieve, belief they won’t be caught or and a lack of understanding. Staff also show varied understanding of student academic integrity and this may have negative consequences for all concerned.”
Given the central importance of textbooks in higher education learning and teaching, two Swansea University researchers, Josie Ransome and Philip Newton, identified the most common textbooks used in PGCerts in UK higher education; the courses designed to teach academics themselves about learning and teaching and which often lead to Fellowship of the Higher Education Academy.
They analysed the texts, along with some assessment specific textbooks, to determine what messages the books convey regarding academic integrity and the behaviours associated with misconduct.
Philip Newton, director of learning and teaching for the Swansea University Medical School said: “We did a few simple qualitative analyses of the content of the books, hunting for anything and everything to do with academic integrity. “We found very little. “There were some exceptions, but in general academic integrity did not feature, and where we did find relevant content, the language used (‘cheating’, ‘plagiarism’) was not reflective of an academic integritybased approach.
“More recent developments in the field, such as the purchasing of custom written assignments (contract cheating), were particularly notable by their absence.
“This is, of course, not to say that these concepts are not covered elsewhere in staff development, but for academic integrity to truly function properly it needs to be part of the mainstream discourse around learning and teaching, not something that academics find out about through rules and regulations once something goes wrong”.
The researchers concluded that current textbooks did not recognise ‘academic integrity’ as a concept.
They recommended that future editions should include academic integrity as a core concept in learning and teaching.
This would help to embed integrity in the mainstream discourse of higher education and prevent it being seen as a standalone, disciplinary concept.
Are we educating educators about academic integrity? A study of UK higher education textbooks, has been published by Taylor and Francis.