Ethic Focus
Grappling for ways to halt the spread of
plagiarism and other cheating in
college, professors often get stuck on the
idea that it's too late to change
students' behavior by the time they reach
college. But a growing number of
campuses, backed by new research, are out to
prove otherwise. "Student
behavior is affected by the communities we build,"
said Gary Pavela, the
University of Maryland's director of judicial
programs and student ethical
conduct. Students cheat in high school in part
because the think everyone else
does. But students can change their ways if
colleges clearly demand honesty,
engage students in ethical issues and put
them in charge of enforcement, said
Pavela and his colleagues at such
schools as UC Davis and Kansas State
University, which are in the
vanguard of a new movement to change the academic
culture. A new large-scale
study suggests they may be right. Although a
startling 68% of college
students admitted in an anonymous survey last fall that
they engaged in some
form of serious cheating, self-reported cheating was 10
percentage points
lower on campuses that simply make a big fuss about academic
integrity. The
rates dipped even lower at colleges with formal honor codes. The
survey
results, which are to be released this week, are the first indication
that
anti-cheating campaigns are making inroads at the large public
universities
where many professors fear a spreading epidemic of academic
dishonesty.
"The results directly challenge the broad view that a kid's
ethical views
at age 17 or 18 are set by their parents for good or ill,"
Pavela said.
Administrators and student leaders have cribbed ideas from
smaller colleges with
traditional honor codes and modified them to work on
large campuses. At UC
Davis, the topic of academic integrity is
everywhere, brought up by the students
themselves. As final exams approach
each term, students give their peers free
cards stamped, "Honesty is the only
policy," and free No. 2 pencils
with the inscription: "Fill in your own
bubble or be in trouble."
Older students do skits to show incoming
freshmen what can happen if they
violate the code of academic conduct.
Professors and their teaching assistants
regularly turn in undergraduates for
the smallest of infractions. In case
students somehow miss the point, every
Wednesday the campus newspaper's judicial
report reveals all the embarrassing
details--except for names--of what one
sophomore calls "a parade of
unbelievably stupid acts" of plagiarism,
improper collaboration and wandering
eyes. All this attention on cheating seems
to make a difference. "I would
never want to cheat here--it's just too
scary," said Tina Valenzuela, a UC
Davis senior who wants to go to
veterinary school. "Just the fact that if you
get caught, you'd read about
it in the paper." At UC Davis, only 31% of
students reported that they got
the questions or answers from someone else
who had already taken a test before
they did--one of the most common forms of
cheating. By comparison, on campuses
that place less emphasis on academic
integrity or ignore the issue altogether,
54% of students reported
getting questions or answers. A skeptic might ask if
students at schools with
honor codes are simply less likely to admit--even
anonymously--that they have
violated the rules. Donald L. McCabe, the Rutgers
University management
professor who conducted the newest study, part of a decade
of research on the
subject of cheating, thinks not. Lower cheating rates at
honor code schools
are validated by surveys of faculty and by students who have
attended both
kinds of institutions, McCabe said. McCabe's latest survey, which
last fall
collected the responses of 2,100 students and 1,000 faculty members at
21
campuses across the country, showed that: * Nationwide, most forms
of
cheating remain at or near record levels. * Men admit to more cheating
than
women, fraternity and sorority members more than nonmembers; students
with lower
grade-point averages say they cheat more than those with high
GPAs. * Students
pursuing degrees in journalism and communications, business
and engineering
reported cheating more than those in the sciences, social
sciences or
humanities. * Only 9.7% of students reported "plagiarizing a
paper in any
way using the Internet," suggesting that such cheating is not as
rampant as
some fear. * Nearly 88% of faculty reported that they observed
some form of
serious cheating, yet 32% never did anything about it. When
asked why they
ignored the problem, professors routinely told McCabe that
they feared they
wouldn't be backed by administrators and could end up facing
legal liability. A
typical fear, he said, is expressed this way: "I accuse
someone of cheating
and the next thing I know I'm sitting in the
administration building with the
student, the student's parents and the
family lawyer." Robert Redinbo,
professor of electrical and computer
engineering at UC Davis, said that such
hassles often dissuade professors at
other campuses from turning in students.
"It's a lot of paperwork and
committees and headaches, so they don't do
it." By contrast, at UC Davis,
where the administration makes it easy to
report cheating, faculty members
turn in three times more students for cheating
than at any other UC campus,
said Jeanne Wilson, director of student judicial
affairs. Unlike traditional
honor code schools that automatically expel students
for cheating, UC Davis
offers milder forms of punishment for students who own up
to their mistakes
in counseling session with judicial offers. Punishment can be
suspension or
probation with chores such as writing a paper on why students
shouldn't cheat
and performing community service to spread the word to their
peers. The
escalating problem of cheating isn't unique to college. In fact, it's
one of
the few things that most students seem to master in high school, if
not
earlier. A record 80% of the nation's brightest high school seniors
admitted
cheating, according to Who's Who Among American High School
Students. For many
it's a measure of high school bravado, a game of
us-against-them: What can
thrill-seeking teenagers get away with under the
noses of teachers who are
either too clueless or battle-weary to care? The
psychology shifts in
college--or at least it can, McCabe said. Although
McCabe believes every school
has a contingent of hard-core cheaters and
strict non-cheaters on the margins,
the vast majority of students, he said,
make up their minds after they get to
college. If they see widespread
cheating, students feel compelled to join in to
make sure their grades do not
suffer from an inflated curve, he said. If they
sense that cheating is rare
and socially unacceptable and that they are
competing on a level playing
field, they are less likely to do it. "That's
where honor codes can make a
big difference," McCabe said. Schools with
traditional honor codes, such as
Princeton, Rice and the University of Virginia,
have some of the lowest rates
of cheating, surveys show. Under traditional honor
codes, students sign a
pledge that they will not cheat and, in return,
professors do not monitor
exams. A violation of this trust often means
expulsion. Students say they
appreciate the trust and freedom of unproctored or
take-home exams and are
thus more willing to meet higher expectations. Yet only
about 100 of the
nation's 3,500 colleges and universities have such traditional
honor codes.
Many others were casualties of the student movement in the
1960s.
Suddenly, though, a resurgence seems to be underway. The
University of Miami, as
well as Georgetown, George Washington and Colgate
universities have adopted
honor codes in recent years, and the University of
Mississippi and the
University of San Diego are headed that way too. "You
can only get so far
with better faculty enforcement," said Pat Drinan, dean
of the college of
arts and sciences at the University of San Diego. "If you
want to make a
significant difference in cheating rates, you have to change
the culture and
move toward an honor code." The Center for Academic Integrity
at Duke
University, founded by McCabe in 1992, now has more than 200
member colleges and
universities. Its annual meetings swell every year with
more students, faculty
and administrators pursuing honor codes. Cheating
generally runs higher on
larger campuses, making exams without proctors
impractical for classes that
enroll 100 students or more. So places like UC
Davis, which has 25,000 students,
continue to monitor exams but also embrace
aspects of an honor code that seem to
work: putting students in charge of
inspiring their peers not to cheat and
disciplining those who do. Under UC
Davis' modified honor code, the student-run
Campus Judicial Board decides
the fate of students in the thorniest cheating
cases. The board members--and
often the students who come before them--also
become campus cheerleaders for
academic honesty. "The university takes
pride in catching people early on and
turning them around," said John
McCann, an engineering student. "I know
because I was one of those
cases." McCann was caught two years ago lifting
another student's homework
because he couldn't figure out some problems. "I
knew I made a mistake and
I admitted it," he said. "I had to take my
punches." Initially
threatened with suspension for one academic quarter,
McCann ended up on
probation with public service. McCann, now a graduate
student and teaching
assistant, has found himself turning in undergraduates
for copying each other's
homework. "In my classes," McCann said, "I make an
announcement:
'You do not cheat. Even if I don't catch you, you won't be
able to pretend you
know the material. In industry, you cannot pretend. If
you don't know what you
are doing, you will get fired.' " Beginning Monday,
Judicial Board members
will hold seminars and hand out T-shirts and other
freebies during the campus'
Integrity Week. "De-Stress Day" comes closer
to finals, with free ice
cream and a chance to dunk an administrator into a
tank of water. "People
say, 'I'm not normally the kind of person who cheats,
but I was so stressed
out,' " said P.J. Haley, a sophomore on the Campus
Judicial Board. "We
say, the point is not to stress out so much . . . and do
the right thing."