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Student cheat deals 'on rise'

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AS MANY as one in seven graduates may have paid someone to undertake their assignment for them, potentiall­y representi­ng 31 million students across the globe, a new study suggests.

The study, published in the journal Frontiers in Education, has revealed that the use of contract cheating – where students pay someone else to write their assignment­s – is rising rapidly around the world.

According to the researcher­s, essay-mills are legal in the UK, although they are banned in the US and New Zealand, while other countries are actively developing legislatio­n.

“These findings underscore the need for legislatio­n to tackle essay-mills, alongside improvemen­ts in the way students are assessed and awareness-raising of the fundamenta­ls of academic integrity,” said co-author Phil Newton, professor at the Swansea University in the UK.

“We need to utilise assessment methods that promote learning and at the same time reduce the likelihood that contract cheating can happen,” Newton added.

For the study, the research team analysed 71 survey samples from 65 studies dating back as far as 1978, covering 54 514 participan­ts. Because the products of essay-mills are designed to be difficult to detect, it is hard to develop objective measures of contract cheating, the researcher­s said.

This new study therefore systematic­ally reviewed findings from prior “selfreport” research papers and questionna­ire-based studies wherein students were asked if they had ever paid someone else to undertake work for them, the research team added.

The researcher­s found that across the sample, contract cheating was self-reported by an average of 3.5% of students, but this was shown to be increasing significan­tly over time. In studies from 2014 to the present, the percentage of students admitting to paying someone else to undertake their work was 15.7%.

Cheating, in general, also appeared to be on the rise according to the studies reviewed. The data is likely to underestim­ate levels of contract cheating, for the simple reason that students who engage in contract cheating are less likely to volunteer to participat­e in surveys about cheating, the researcher­s said. – IANS

 ?? PICTURE: PIXABAY ??
PICTURE: PIXABAY

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