Cheating Academic Integrity. Группа авторов

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be most effective in enhancing integrity?

      The idea that better pedagogy can address many of the causes of cheating is picked up in the next chapter by Harrison and Spencer, who focus on what we've learned about the relationship between pedagogy and cheating as a result of the pandemic and the abrupt move to Emergency Remote Teaching (ERT). After cogently arguing that ERT is not equivalent to online learning, Harrison and Spencer walk us through what the last 30 years have taught us about academic integrity and online learning. Particularly that we should not expect to combat cheating with blunt force objects like surveillance technology; we have seen during the pandemic era the many downsides of such a reliance. Instead, we should be embracing the good pedagogical techniques that we know work for enhancing learning and integrity regardless of instructional modality: 1) cultivating and maintaining socially presence, a sense of community, and social engagement if you will; 2) building and supporting cognitive presence, the purposeful intellectual engagement in the learning activities; and, 3) universally designing learning experiences to meet the full range of diversity that is in the classroom.

      Together, the chapters is this book, and its companion piece (Journal of College and Character, 23(1), 2022), provide researchers, instructors, students, and staff with 30 years of knowledge about how we can all do more to stop cheating academic integrity and to start prioritizing the integrity of the academic experience and the academic degree in the twenty‐first century. Readers who have not yet found the special journal issue should add it to their reading list because it includes topics not covered explicitly in this volume, such as the influence of research from the Australasia region on our understandings of cheating; the important policy and procedure features that institutions must consider, including the history and impact of honor codes; the evolution in universities from punitive to educational responses to cheating; and finally, the call for institutions to attend to the complexities and needs of our student populations who come to higher education with linguistic and cultural diversities that impact how they relate and experience learning, academic work, and academic integrity.

      1 CBS News (2021). ‘As online education grows, the business of cheating is booming’. Available at: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/online-education-cheating-business/ (Accessed: November 15, 2021).

      2 Hobbs, T.D. (2021). ‘Cheating at school is easier than ever—and it's rampant’, The Wall Street Journal, 12 May. Available at: https://www.wsj.com/articles/cheating-at-school-is-easier-than-everand-its-rampant-11620828004 (Accessed: November 15, 2021).

      3 Lederman, D. (2020). ‘Best way to stop cheating in online courses? “Teach better”’, Inside Higher Education. Available at: https://www.insidehighered.com/digital-learning/article/2020/07/22/technology-best-way-stop-online-cheating-no-experts-say-better (Accessed: November 15, 2021).

      4 Medina, J., Benner, K., and Taylor, K. (2019). ‘Actresses, business leaders and other wealthy parents charged in US college entry fraud’, The New York Times, 12 March. Available at: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/12/us/college-admissions-cheating-scandal.html (Accessed: November 15, 2021).

      5 Moody, J. (2021). ‘How cheating in college hurts students’, US News, 31 March. Available at: https://www.usnews.com/education/best-colleges/articles/how-cheating-in-college-hurts-students (Accessed: November 15, 2021).

      6 Newton, D. (2020). ‘Another program with shifting education online: cheating’, The Hechinger Report, August 7. Available at: https://hechingerreport.org/another-problem-with-shifting-education-online-cheating/ (Accessed: November 15, 2021).

      7 Stephens, J.M. (2019). ‘Natural and normal, but unethical and evitable: The epidemic of academic dishonesty and how we end it’, Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 51(4), pp. 8–17.

      8 Supiano, B. (2020). ‘Students cheat. How much does it matter?’, The Chronicle of Higher Education, October 21. Available at: https://www.chronicle.com/article/students-cheat-how-much-does-it-matter (Accessed: November 15, 2021).

       Guy J. Curtis

      University of Western Australia, School of Psychological Science

      It is easy

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