{"id":6394,"date":"2022-03-15T09:37:13","date_gmt":"2022-03-15T13:37:13","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/faculty-excellence\/?page_id=6394"},"modified":"2024-12-17T11:30:53","modified_gmt":"2024-12-17T16:30:53","slug":"academic-honesty-and-student-cheating","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/faculty-excellence\/academic-honesty-and-student-cheating\/","title":{"rendered":"Academic Dishonesty and Student Cheating"},"content":{"rendered":"

Instructors can mitigate cheating in their courses by understanding the reasons students cheat and using course design that simultaneously addresses students\u2019 reasons for cheating and limits opportunities to cheat.<\/p>\n

A multi-pronged approach works best<\/h2>\n

A series of foundational studies on academic dishonesty conducted between 1963 and 2010 found high numbers of university students admitting cheating at least once in some form, with a large percentage also admitting to cheating on exams. However, these studies also recognized not all university students cheat, students cheat in \u201ckey\u201d ways for similar reasons, and a minority of students identified as repeat cheaters. The presence of consistently enforced honor codes also mitigated student cheating (McCabe et al.; Lang).<\/p>\n

During the Covid pandemic, some instructors and the popular press perceived an increase in cheating tied to new opportunities created by the sudden, widespread use of online classes (Adams; Dey; Hobbs). At this writing, research into levels of cheating during the pandemic is still developing (ICAI, \u201cMcCabe-ICAI Survey\u201d), but some recent surveys provide students\u2019 views of tech tools such as online \u201cstudy\u201d or \u201ctutoring\u201d sites, and group email and chat apps which may be used\u00a0 for cheating (ICAI, \u201cFacts and Statistics;\u201d Inside Higher Ed\/College Pulse Survey 2021).<\/p>\n

This page provides a brief overview of the reasons students cheat, followed by some practical strategies for overall course design, mitigating academic dishonesty, plagiarism, improper collaboration, and cheating on tests.<\/p>\n

Dishonest behavior increases under certain conditions<\/strong><\/h2>\n

Students\u2019 self-reported reasons for cheating mirror earlier studies and include the following:<\/p>\n