Saana Sixtus Bieranye Bayaa Martin, Ablordeppey Ephraim, Mensah Napoleon Jackson, Karikari Thomas K
Department of Dispensing Technology, School of Applied Science and Technology, Wa Polytechnic, P. O. Box 553, Wa, Ghana.
Department of Building Technology and Estate Management, School of Applied Science and Technology, Wa Polytechnic, Wa, Ghana.
BMC Res Notes. 2016 Apr 25;9:234. doi: 10.1186/s13104-016-2044-0.
Integrity in academic work is a critical benchmark of every profession. For this reason, special attention should be devoted to addressing academic dishonesty (AD) in higher education to prevent the potential transfer of these practices to the workplace. In order to effectively address AD in Africa, further information about correlates of, and barriers to, the effectiveness of existing AD-controlling measures is needed. In Ghana, little is known about AD from the perspective of students. Here, we present a first report of Ghanaian undergraduate students' self-reported understanding of, and support for, institutional AD regulations, their involvement in specific dishonest behaviours, as well as their motivation factors.
Approximately 92% of respondents said they were aware of institutional regulations on AD. However, only 31% rated their understanding as high. Respondents believed that their lecturers had better understanding of, and support for, these regulations than the students (p < 0.001 and p < 0.0001 respectively). Approximately 40% of respondents had witnessed their colleagues engage in AD before, but the majority (94%) had never reported these acts. The pursuit of good grades, high academic load and pressure to please family and guardians were the leading causes of AD. Cheating during examinations and inappropriately sharing answers in the preparation of assignments were some of the highly-occurring forms of AD. Respondents believed that copying colleagues' work without their permission was a serious offense but doing so with their permission was not.
Our findings suggest that the sampled students consent to cheating-they believed that they committed no misconduct once the parties involved had agreed on the act. Considering these misconceptions, institutions should do more to help their students better understand the different forms of AD and how to avoid them.
学术工作中的诚信是每个专业的关键基准。因此,应特别关注解决高等教育中的学术不端行为(AD),以防止这些行为潜在地转移到工作场所。为了有效解决非洲的学术不端行为,需要更多关于现有学术不端行为控制措施的相关性和有效性障碍的信息。在加纳,从学生的角度对学术不端行为了解甚少。在此,我们首次报告加纳本科生对学校学术不端行为规定的自我报告理解、支持情况,他们参与特定不诚实行为的情况以及他们的动机因素。
约92%的受访者表示他们知晓学校关于学术不端行为的规定。然而,只有31%的人认为自己理解程度高。受访者认为他们的讲师比学生对这些规定有更好的理解和支持(分别为p < 0.001和p < 0.0001)。约40%的受访者曾目睹同事有学术不端行为,但大多数人(94%)从未举报过这些行为。追求好成绩、高学业负担以及取悦家人和监护人的压力是学术不端行为的主要原因。考试作弊和在作业准备过程中不当分享答案是一些常见的学术不端行为形式。受访者认为未经同事允许抄袭其作业是严重违规行为,但经其允许则不然。
我们的研究结果表明,抽样学生认可作弊行为——他们认为只要相关各方就该行为达成一致,他们就没有不当行为。考虑到这些误解,学校应采取更多措施帮助学生更好地理解学术不端行为的不同形式以及如何避免这些行为。