Title of article :
Who cheats at university? A self-report study of dishonest academic behaviours in a sample of Australian university students
Author/Authors :
Helen Marsden، نويسنده , , Marie Carroll and James T. Neill، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
The present study investigated the dishonest academic behaviours of Australian university students (N= 954) and their
relationships with demographic factors, academic policy advised to students, academic self-efficacy, and academic
orientation. It was hypothesised that higher levels of dishonesty would be associated with low learning-orientation, high
grade-orientation, low academic self-efficacy and nonreceipt of information about the rules of cheating and plagiarism.
Descriptive analyses revealed high levels of three types of self-reported academic dishonesty: cheating, plagiarism and
falsification. Regression analyses revealed demographic variables, academic orientation and academic self-efficacy to have
differential predictive value for the three types of dishonesty, underlining the argument that it is misleading to measure
academic dishonesty as a unidimensional construct. The results are discussed in terms of implications for strategic
interventions and university policy formulation.
Journal title :
Australian Journal of Psychology
Journal title :
Australian Journal of Psychology