Academic integrity in the information age: insights from health sciences students at a South African University

IF 1.9 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education Pub Date : 2024-05-30 DOI:10.1108/jarhe-12-2023-0565
Colette Melissa Kell, Yasmeen Thandar, Adelle Kemlall Bhundoo, Firoza Haffejee, Bongiwe Mbhele, Jennifer Ducray
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Abstract

Purpose

Academic integrity is vital to the success and sustainability of the academic project and particularly critical in the training of ethical and informed health professionals. Yet studies have found that cheating in online exams was commonplace during the COVID-19 pandemic. With the increased use of online and blended learning post-COVID-19, an understanding of student cheating dynamics is essential for developing effective strategies to combat academic dishonesty in the rapidly changing educational landscape.

Design/methodology/approach

This study explored academic integrity and reasons for dishonesty from the perspective of health sciences students at a South African University of Technology (UOT) via the Fraud Diamond. To gain an in-depth understanding of the topic, a qualitative method was employed, and data were collected via focus group discussions with nine student class representatives. These data were analysed thematically using the Clarke and Braun approach.

Findings

Cheating during online assessment was common and innovative, with students manipulating others and exploiting friendships to facilitate dishonest practices. Student motivations for dishonesty included a lack of consequences and pressure due to a lack of time management, engagement and preparation.

Practical implications

This study underscores the need for institutions to adopt an adaptable, multi-faceted approach that addresses student cheating opportunity, motivation and normalisation of dishonest practices whilst strengthening academic integrity policies and enforcement thereof.

Originality/value

The findings contribute valuable insights into the ongoing academic integrity crisis in higher education in the South African context.

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信息时代的学术诚信:南非一所大学健康科学专业学生的见解
目的学术诚信对于学术项目的成功和可持续发展至关重要,对于培养有道德和有知识的卫生专业人员尤为关键。然而研究发现,在 COVID-19 大流行期间,在线考试作弊现象十分普遍。随着 COVID-19 后在线学习和混合式学习的使用越来越多,了解学生的作弊动态对于在快速变化的教育环境中制定打击学术不诚信的有效策略至关重要。为了深入了解这一主题,本研究采用了定性方法,通过与九名学生班级代表进行焦点小组讨论来收集数据。研究结果在线测评期间的作弊行为十分普遍,而且具有创新性,学生们操纵他人并利用友谊来促进不诚实行为的发生。学生不诚实的动机包括缺乏时间管理、参与和准备导致的后果和压力。这项研究强调,各院校有必要采取一种适应性强的多层面方法来解决学生作弊的机会、动机和不诚实行为的正常化问题,同时加强学术诚信政策及其执行。
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来源期刊
Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education
Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
11.80%
发文量
63
期刊介绍: Higher education around the world has become a major topic of discussion, debate, and controversy, as a range of political, economic, social, and technological pressures result in a myriad of changes at all levels. But the quality and quantity of critical dialogue and research and their relationship with practice remains limited. This internationally peer-reviewed journal addresses this shortfall by focusing on the scholarship and practice of teaching and learning and higher education and covers: - Higher education teaching, learning, curriculum, assessment, policy, management, leadership, and related areas - Digitization, internationalization, and democratization of higher education, and related areas such as lifelong and lifewide learning - Innovation, change, and reflections on current practices
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