Contract cheating: an increasing challenge for global academic community arising from COVID-19

Abstract Due to COVID-19, universities with limited expertise with the digital environment had to rapidly transition to online teaching and assessment. This transition did not create a new problem but has offered more opportunities for contract cheating and diversified the types of such services. Wh...

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Main Authors: Guzyal Hill, Jon Mason, Alex Dunn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2021-07-01
Series:Research and Practice in Technology Enhanced Learning
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s41039-021-00166-8
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spelling doaj-57b1cebb94b04d5b8f0c2b45b2eb38882021-08-01T11:43:55ZengSpringerOpenResearch and Practice in Technology Enhanced Learning1793-70782021-07-0116112010.1186/s41039-021-00166-8Contract cheating: an increasing challenge for global academic community arising from COVID-19Guzyal Hill0Jon Mason1Alex Dunn2School of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences, University of New EnglandInternational Graduate Centre of Education, Charles Darwin UniversityCharles Darwin UniversityAbstract Due to COVID-19, universities with limited expertise with the digital environment had to rapidly transition to online teaching and assessment. This transition did not create a new problem but has offered more opportunities for contract cheating and diversified the types of such services. While universities and lecturers were adjusting to the new teaching styles and developing new assessment methods, opportunistic contract cheating providers have been offering $50 COVID-19 discounts and students securing the services of commercial online tutors to take their online exams or to take advantage of real-time assistance from ‘pros’ while sitting examinations. The article contributes to the discourse on contract cheating by reporting on an investigation of the scope and scale of the growing problems related to academic integrity exacerbated by an urgent transition to online assessments during the COVID-19 pandemic. The dark reality is the illegal services are developing at a faster pace than the systems required to curb them, as demonstrated by the results. The all-penetrating issues indicate systemic failures on a global scale that cannot be addressed by an individual academic or university acting alone. Multi-level solutions including academics, universities and the global community are essential. Future research must focus on developing a model of collaboration to address this problem on several levels, taking into account (1) individual academics, (2) universities, (3) countries and (4) international communities.https://doi.org/10.1186/s41039-021-00166-8Ghost-writingGhost-studyingCOVID-19Contract cheatingOnline examsAcademic integrity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Guzyal Hill
Jon Mason
Alex Dunn
spellingShingle Guzyal Hill
Jon Mason
Alex Dunn
Contract cheating: an increasing challenge for global academic community arising from COVID-19
Research and Practice in Technology Enhanced Learning
Ghost-writing
Ghost-studying
COVID-19
Contract cheating
Online exams
Academic integrity
author_facet Guzyal Hill
Jon Mason
Alex Dunn
author_sort Guzyal Hill
title Contract cheating: an increasing challenge for global academic community arising from COVID-19
title_short Contract cheating: an increasing challenge for global academic community arising from COVID-19
title_full Contract cheating: an increasing challenge for global academic community arising from COVID-19
title_fullStr Contract cheating: an increasing challenge for global academic community arising from COVID-19
title_full_unstemmed Contract cheating: an increasing challenge for global academic community arising from COVID-19
title_sort contract cheating: an increasing challenge for global academic community arising from covid-19
publisher SpringerOpen
series Research and Practice in Technology Enhanced Learning
issn 1793-7078
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract Due to COVID-19, universities with limited expertise with the digital environment had to rapidly transition to online teaching and assessment. This transition did not create a new problem but has offered more opportunities for contract cheating and diversified the types of such services. While universities and lecturers were adjusting to the new teaching styles and developing new assessment methods, opportunistic contract cheating providers have been offering $50 COVID-19 discounts and students securing the services of commercial online tutors to take their online exams or to take advantage of real-time assistance from ‘pros’ while sitting examinations. The article contributes to the discourse on contract cheating by reporting on an investigation of the scope and scale of the growing problems related to academic integrity exacerbated by an urgent transition to online assessments during the COVID-19 pandemic. The dark reality is the illegal services are developing at a faster pace than the systems required to curb them, as demonstrated by the results. The all-penetrating issues indicate systemic failures on a global scale that cannot be addressed by an individual academic or university acting alone. Multi-level solutions including academics, universities and the global community are essential. Future research must focus on developing a model of collaboration to address this problem on several levels, taking into account (1) individual academics, (2) universities, (3) countries and (4) international communities.
topic Ghost-writing
Ghost-studying
COVID-19
Contract cheating
Online exams
Academic integrity
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s41039-021-00166-8
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