Teplitsky Paul E
Department of Community and Clinical Dentistry, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada.
J Dent Educ. 2002 Apr;66(4):485-506.
The purpose of this investigation was to a) compare the opinions of Canadian faculty and students as regards to what they felt was an appropriate penalty for particular academic offenses and b) to analyze the results and create a jurisprudence grid to serve as a guideline for appropriate disciplinary action. Two hundred questionnaires were distributed to the ten dental colleges in Canada. Each college was asked to have ten faculty and ten students complete the survey. A response rate of 100 percent was achieved for students and 92 percent for faculty. The questionnaire required respondents to select what they felt were appropriate penalties for a list of fifteen academic offenses and to render judgment on three specific cases. Statistical analysis of survey responses led to the following conclusions: 1) students gave equal or more lenient penalties than faculty for the same offense; 2) extenuating circumstances introduced via case presentations altered penalty choice only slightly; and 3) offenses could be grouped to correspond with appropriate penalties, thereby establishing a jurisprudence grid that may serve as a guideline for adjudication committees.
a)比较加拿大教职员工和学生对于他们认为针对特定学术违规行为应给予何种适当处罚的看法;b)分析调查结果并创建一个判例法网格,作为适当纪律处分的指导方针。向加拿大的十所牙科学院发放了200份问卷。要求每所学院让10名教职员工和10名学生完成调查。学生的回复率达到了100%,教职员工的回复率为92%。问卷要求受访者为15项学术违规行为清单选择他们认为合适的处罚,并对三个具体案例做出评判。对调查回复的统计分析得出以下结论:1)对于相同的违规行为,学生给出的处罚与教职员工相同或更宽松;2)通过案例展示引入的情有可原地减轻情节仅略微改变了处罚选择;3)违规行为可以分组以对应适当的处罚,从而建立一个判例法网格,可为裁决委员会提供指导方针。