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Cheating: Good News, Bad News
Duke undergraduate students report that they are cheating less
in the classroom than five years ago, according to the 2005-06
survey on academic integrity at Duke. But there is still cause
for concern, administrators say.
Duke's rate of cheating is generally comparable to other universities
with honor codes. However, although the rate of unauthorized collaboration
and falsifying lab data has dropped, it is still higher than that
at the other universities surveyed, the report stated.
Judith Ruderman Ph.D. '76, vice provost and chair of the Academic
Integrity Council, says the survey has been conducted at Duke every
five years since 1995 and is compared with a national survey done
by Rutgers University professor Donald McCabe, founder of the Center
for Academic Integrity, which is affiliated with Duke's Kenan Institute
for Ethics.
Ruderman and students involved in presenting the data express optimism
about the results. The previous survey, in 2000, caused concern
when nearly half of the students reported unauthorized collaboration
or plagiarism—well above national averages. Administrators redoubled
efforts to engage students and faculty members in discussions about
the issue.
Those efforts appear to have produced positive results. Students
reported that faculty members talked more about integrity issues
compared with 2000; however, much of that discussion focused on
plagiarism. Reports of plagiarism have dropped from 46 percent
in 1995, to 38 percent in 2000, to 26 percent in the most recent
survey.
Rates of unauthorized collaboration fell from 45 percent in 2000
to 29 percent in 2005. But that rate is still higher than the average
of 24 percent reported by other universities with honor codes,
senior Joe Fore, Duke Student Government executive vice president,
notes.
Twenty-one percent of students reported they falsified lab data,
nearly twice the average rate at the other universities. The survey
showed that 40 percent of students characterized the practice as
"trivial cheating."
Ruderman says faculty members need to state clearly at the start
of the semester what constitutes unauthorized collaboration. In
the survey, only 30 percent of students said faculty members discuss
guidelines on group work or collaboration. The lab data results
reveal a more complicated problem. Ruderman says the best guess
about the survey numbers is that students learn to approach lab
work as "busy work" that is expected to lead to a particular result.
"We think the solution here is to look at how the labs are designed,"
she says. "I think we need to think about how to give the students
ownership of the lab. We need to teach them that the lab isn't
about coming up with the correct result but to learn research techniques
and thinking skills."
www.aas.duke.edu/admin/council/agendas/survey06_05_25.doc
www.academicintegrity.org
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