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Online Classes and Cheating PRESENTED BY JEFF BARBEE
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Common Thoughts Online courses are much easier to cheat in Cheating happens much more often in online courses They have little interaction with the instructor Students often do not value online courses as much
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Learning Outcomes Understand the rate of cheating in an online course compared to a face-to-face course Categorize the type of cheating that occurs in on-line courses Assess if cheating is occurring in your class Formulate a plan to reduce, if not eliminate cheating from happening
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Who Takes Online Courses? In 2011 the University of Phoenix Enrolled More Than 380,000 Students in Degree Programs Programs From Associate Through Doctorate; Online, Traditional, or Combination 2.2% Non-Resident Aliens, 18.4% Black, 36.3% White; 68.9% Female NCES Reported from 2000-2008 an Increase From 8% to 20% of Students Who Enrolled in an Online Course
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The Future Outlook A 2011 Survey of Chief Academic Officers Found that 65% View Online Learning as a Critical Part of Long Term Strategy
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Student Attitudes Small Difference in Views When Comparing Face-to-Face with Asynchronous Online Courses Face-to-Face Usually preferred Large Drop off Compared to Synchronous Online Courses Higher Drop Out Rate in Synchronous Courses
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Why Do Students Cheat? King, Guyette, and Piotrowski State the “Fraud Triangle” In Their Research (Pressure, Opportunity, Attitude) Incentive/Pressure- To Earn A Good Grade Opportunity- No One Is Watching Rationalization/Attitude- Gives In To The “Everyone Is Doing It” Lack of Class Support; I.E. Saturday Night, Finishing the Work
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Your Cheating Ways Laziness Stress Poor Organizational and Time Management Skills Cheating Being Viewed As “Easy” The Course Being Difficult Cheating is Happening in the Class
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Types of Cheating Collusion Deception Plagiarism Technology Manipulation Misrepresentation
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Collusion Organized Cheating Knowingly Exchanging Information Using Past Exams, Tests, or Quizzes
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Deception A student Acts Alone Uses Work From Another Student Without Permission Receiving Help When Not Allowed
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Plagiarism Claiming Credit For Work That Is Not Theirs Copy and Pasting Making Up A Reference List Found More Often in Upper-Classmen
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Technology Manipulation “Having A Computer Crash” Unauthorized Internet Usage/Sources; Most Often Found with Under-Classmen Technology Failure Intense Tech Savvy Student
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Misrepresentation Students Claim Work That Is Not Theirs Students Use Someone Else To Complete The Course Work Outsourcing
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Where do we hear most about these cases? Recent Chronicle Article Western Carolina University Implemented a Fake Course Invited Students to Cheat Student Hired a Company to Complete Course
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MOOCs Harvard Studies Found Students Register Two Different Accounts Purposely Fail Assignments to Find The Answers for Other Account Data of 2 million Students from 115 Courses Used 1% of Students Used This Method Students Who Had Earned 20 or More Certificates Through These Programs: 25% Cheated This Way
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Athletics According to the Chronicle, Last Year, the NCAA Was Investigating 20 cases of Academic Misconduct 18 Cases Were Division I 1 was Division II, 1 was Division III One Example, Math Professor Logged On Students Account and Helped Students Complete Assignments
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The Misconceptions It is Easier to Cheat in Online Courses Cheating Happens Much More Often in Online Courses Online Courses Are Not Personable
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The Truths about Online Courses No Support of showing that cheating happens in on-line classes more than traditional courses Studies did not show a clear evidence that it is easier to cheat in an on-line class Instructors can have a presence in the course Age Difference and Views On Cheating Majority of Online Students also Attend Traditional Classes
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Preventing Cheating Explain Expectations, Be Clear Of What Is Expected Avoid Simple Answer Assessments (Yes/No Questions) Timed Exams Honesty Statements After Assessment Open Ended/Higher Level Thinking Questions Allow/Encourage The Use Of Course Materials Allow Multiple Attempts Change Tests Every Few Semesters
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Make The Course Personable Be Active in the Course Have an Online Presence Allowing Students to Communicate in by Written Communication Promote High Ethical Values
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The Syllabus The value online syllabi cannot be over stated First and most important document Sets the tone of the course
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Tools To Help Catch Cheating
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References
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