Attacking Exam Cheating and Instilling Academic Integrity in Students
Published by: WCET | 6/29/2016
Published by: WCET | 6/29/2016
I have always enjoyed the “Spy vs. Spy” section of Mad Magazine. If you are not familiar with it check out this animated version. In the wordless comic strip two spies battle it out against each other. The spies are identical except for one is dressed in black and the other in white. The comic strip is entertaining because every time one spy is confident that he has foiled the plans of the other spy some new technique or technology will be introduced to reverse the outcome.
Those of us in the industry of exam proctoring can identify with this. Just when we get good at preventing cheating with one strategy, the students come up with another strategy. Once it was sufficient to not allow students to have their cell phones with them during testing. But now there are various forms of wearable technology that can be used to cheat. Sometimes it seems that even our best efforts only serve to keep the honest students honest. When a student is intent on cheating, they often seem to find a new way.
Just as technology can be a great tool for learning, it can be an effective tool for cheating as well. Some of the ways that students have indicated that they cheat include texting answers to other students during an exam, snapping pictures of an exam using their phone, using their phone to search the Internet for answers during an exam, purchasing term papers online, and creating fake test scores or letters of recommendation for college admission.
The Josephson Institute on Ethics surveyed 23,000 American high school and college students about their frequency and perception of cheating. More than half (51%) admitted to cheating on an exam one or more times in the past academic year. Students were asked if they agreed with this statement, “In the real world, successful people do what they have to do to win, even if others consider it cheating.” Fifty-seven percent of students agreed.
When asked by the Josephson Institute why they cheat, the leading responses included – peer pressure, to help a friend, the gains outweigh the penalties, low chances of being caught, pressure from expectations, and not enough time to prepare. As we prepare learners to be competent professionals in their careers, one very important aspect is to instill in them a mindset of integrity. To foster this culture of integrity, schools are using services that authenticate learner identity and monitor student performance during examinations.
To contribute to the body of knowledge about academic integrity SmarterServices administers the Annual Proctoring & Learner Authentication Survey. The purpose of the survey is to collect data about good practices and perceptions using learner authentication and testing integrity services. While the Josephson Institute survey and others have focused on the event of cheating, this survey focuses on efforts to monitor student behavior in an effort to discourage cheating.
Responses were received from 365 persons representing the following stakeholder groups: Faculty (21%), Learners (15%), School Administrators (20%), Proctors (12%) and Test Center Administrators (32%).
The following findings from the survey are relevant to current practice:
Complete survey results are available on our website.
So what can be done to foster a culture that promotes academic integrity? I have had several conversations recently with faculty and proctors about the matter. Here are some actionable suggestions from those conversations:
CURRENT TECHNOLOGY – Rest assured that students will take advantage of the latest technology in their efforts to cheat. Faculty and proctors must stay informed about emerging technologies and their impact on testing integrity.
HONOR CODE – Each educational institution which measures mastery through assessment should issue an honor code to their students so that the students understand the expectations relative to academic integrity. One of the most common excuses that students make when confronted with a testing integrity violation is that “no one told me that doing this was wrong.” Students must understand how they should act with honor and integrity as well as the rules of what is and is not allowed. A part of the honor code should be the ramifications and punishments for violations.
INTEGRITY TRAINING – Students have differing perceptions about which behaviors are acceptable. A training program should affirm and encourage those actions which are honorable and inform students about the actions that are not honorable and the ramifications both professionally and academically. Orientation courses or new student experiences are great places for such training. Some faculty members have students sign an integrity statement as an early assignment in their course.
FACULTY INVOLVEMENT – When a faculty member is actively engaged in a course then the student is more likely to feel that cheating is a violation of that relationship. When an online course is taught in a fully automated fashion then the human element is removed and the student may feel that that they are not letting any particular person down if they cheat.
MULTI-MODAL APPROACH – Just like the spies, when students take all of their exams in the same context, they will begin to notice weaknesses and attempt to exploit them. It is a good practice for a school to provide several modalities of proctoring and not allow students to do all of their testing with one modality. Examples of testing modalities include – instructor as proctor, testing in a testing center, testing with an approved proctoring professional (I.e. a human resources officer in a corporation), automated-virtual proctoring, and live-virtual proctoring. Tools such as SmarterProctoring.com facilitate the work flow management in a multi-modal environment.
If you have ideas, war stories or success stories about fostering a climate of academic integrity, I would like to hear from you.
Dr. Mac Adkins
CEO and Founder
SmarterServices.com
mac@smarterservices.com
Photo Credit: ini budi setiawan
1 reply on “Attacking Exam Cheating and Instilling Academic Integrity in Students”
Thanks so much for this, Mac.
This is really valuable information.
One additional thing that I did when teaching online, was right in the beginning, open a discussion forum about why academic integrity is important. It was interesting that students usually went right to loosing the credit for the course or to being humiliated if caught. Most of the issues discussed were about being caught and about dire consequences.
While training faculty, I would ask them what they put in their syllabi about cheating and plagiarism (most students don’t get the differences). Almost all said that they posted clear consequences to rule breaking. Some said they went into describing plagiarism. In 8 years of teaching faculty only a couple said that they explain why integrity is important to them and why it should be important to the student.
It is really important to tell students that they devalue their own degree when they obtain any portion of it dishonestly. College degrees get known by their effectiveness when people are graduated and begin to perform in the world. If they didn’t learn what they were supposed to learn, they may have some big gaps in their ability to perform according to what the outcomes of their degrees signify. The college from which they graduate and the degree that they identify as having earned, create a reputation. What’s the reputation they want their degree to have?
It was important to ME that students did not cheat. I value my college’s reputation and I wanted them to be very successful. Dishonestly doesn’t work to that end.
So, add to the informative piece of what cheating is, the piece about why it is important–more than honor, although that is important, it’s about the value of the education and the perceived value of that degree and of them in the world.
Pat James
Executive Director
California Community Colleges
Online Education Initiative