Title
Academic integrity perceptions regarding computing assessments and essays
Abstract
Student perceptions of academic integrity have been extensively researched in relation to text-based assessments, but there is rather less research relating to non-text-based assessments such as computer programs, databases, and spreadsheets. This paper reports the findings from a survey of computing students and academics to investigate perceptions of particular academic practices with regard to both essays and computing assessments. For each practice the research sought to discover whether it was perceived to constitute plagiarism or collusion and whether it was considered to be acceptable in an academic environment. While there was general agreement between academics and students regarding some practices, both groups displayed high levels of uncertainty about other practices. There was considerable variation between their attitudes to similar practices in the text and non-text environments, and between what was seen as plagiarism/collusion and perceptions of unacceptability. That is, there were practices that were perceived to be plagiarism or collusion but were considered acceptable, and others that were considered not to be plagiarism or collusion but were nevertheless thought unacceptable. These findings suggest a need for academic integrity policies and procedures specific to computing, accompanied by discipline-specific student education.
Year
DOI
Venue
2014
10.1145/2632320.2632342
ICER
Keywords
Field
DocType
intellectual property rights,non-text-based assessment,ethics,computing education,computer science education,academic integrity
Academic integrity,Psychology,Knowledge management,Pedagogy,Perception,Collusion
Conference
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
9
0.59
8
Authors
5
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Simon132040.39
Beth Cook2231.85
Judy Sheard344460.95
Angela Carbone4506.15
Chris Johnson5517.03