A Robust Examination of Cheating on Unproctored Online Exams

IF 2.4 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Electronic Journal of e-Learning Pub Date : 2024-05-08 DOI:10.34190/ejel.22.5.3173
Richard Fendler, David Beard, Jonathan M. Godbey
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Abstract

The rapid growth of online education, especially since the pandemic, is presenting educators with numerous challenges. Chief among these is concern about academic dishonesty, especially on unproctored online exams. Students cheating on exams is not a new phenomenon. The topic has been discussed and debated within institutions of higher learning, and significant levels of cheating have been reported in the academic literature for over sixty years. Much of this literature, however, has focused on student behavior in a classroom utilizing proctored, in-class exams. Grades on exams usually determine most of a student’s final grade in a course, and GPAs are used by employers and graduate schools to indicate a student’s subject matter mastery. As more conventional colleges and universities expand their online course offerings it is natural to wonder if academic dishonesty is more prevalent in online classes than in face-to-face classes. In particular, are students more likely to cheat when no one is watching (i.e., on unproctored assessment assignments) than they do when someone is watching (i.e., on proctored assessment assignments)? The purpose of this study is to investigate whether students cheat more on unproctored online exams than they do on proctored in-classroom exams, and if so, is there any pattern to their cheating behavior. Our findings are derived from careful empirical analysis of 741 undergraduate students who completed three unproctored online exams, several collaboration-encouraged assignments, and a proctored in-class comprehensive final exam in the same course with the same instructor. Additionally, we collected demographic and human capital data for every student. Using bivariate and regression analysis, we find significant evidence of more cheating on unproctored online exams than on proctored in-class exams even though students were given stern honor code violation warnings. Moreover, we discover that student cheating increased with each unproctored online exam, implying that students learn how to cheat as they become more familiar with taking online assessment assignments. Finally, we find that students with certain demographic and human capital characteristics tend to cheat more than others. This research strongly supports the use of proctoring for all evaluation assignments in online classes to ensure that grades in these classes properly reflect student aptitude as opposed to merely reflecting their ability to cheat.
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对未经监考的在线考试作弊行为的可靠检验
在线教育的快速发展,尤其是自大流行病以来,给教育工作者带来了众多挑战。其中最主要的是对学术不诚实的担忧,尤其是在未经监考的在线考试中。学生考试作弊并非新现象。六十多年来,高等院校一直在讨论和争论这个话题,学术文献中也有大量关于作弊的报道。然而,这些文献大多关注的是学生在课堂上利用监考、当堂考试的行为。考试成绩通常决定了学生在一门课程中的大部分最终成绩,而 GPA 则被雇主和研究生院用来衡量学生对学科知识的掌握程度。随着越来越多的传统高等院校扩大在线课程的开设,人们自然会想,与面授课程相比,学术不诚信在在线课程中是否更为普遍。特别是,学生在无人监督的情况下(即在未经监考的评估作业中),是否比在有人监督的情况下(即在监考的评估作业中)更容易作弊?本研究的目的是调查学生在未经监考的在线考试中的作弊行为是否多于在经监考的课堂考试中的作弊行为,如果是,那么他们的作弊行为是否有规律可循。我们的研究结果来自对 741 名本科生的仔细实证分析,这些学生在同一门课程中完成了三次未经监考的在线考试、几次鼓励合作的作业以及一次经过监考的课堂综合期末考试,而监考教师是同一人。此外,我们还收集了每个学生的人口统计学和人力资本数据。通过二元分析和回归分析,我们发现有显著证据表明,即使学生受到了严厉的违反荣誉守则警告,但在未经监考的在线考试中,作弊现象比在监考的课堂考试中更为严重。此外,我们还发现,每次未经监考的在线考试,学生的作弊行为都会增加,这意味着随着学生对在线评估作业越来越熟悉,他们学会了如何作弊。最后,我们发现,具有某些人口统计和人力资本特征的学生往往比其他学生更容易作弊。这项研究强烈支持在网络课程的所有评估作业中使用监考,以确保这些课程的成绩能够正确反映学生的能力,而不仅仅是反映他们的作弊能力。
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来源期刊
Electronic Journal of e-Learning
Electronic Journal of e-Learning EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
18.20%
发文量
34
审稿时长
20 weeks
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