Academic Dishonesty in a Post-Secondary Multilingual Institution

While plagiarism is a continuing educational writing issue in many post-secondary institutions, instances of contract cheating are also rising. Plagiarism is usually conceptualized as a type of writing misconduct or violation of existing institutional academic standards, but very little attention ha...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Daniel H. Chang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BC TEAL 2018-10-01
Series:BC TEAL Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs-o.library.ubc.ca/index.php/BCTJ/article/view/287
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spelling doaj-ae58f5301fdd429e9f3d3149e0b6c8262020-11-25T00:40:21ZengBC TEALBC TEAL Journal2369-42112018-10-01314962Academic Dishonesty in a Post-Secondary Multilingual InstitutionDaniel H. Chang0Simon Fraser UniversityWhile plagiarism is a continuing educational writing issue in many post-secondary institutions, instances of contract cheating are also rising. Plagiarism is usually conceptualized as a type of writing misconduct or violation of existing institutional academic standards, but very little attention has been paid to contract cheating—when students seek paid tutors to write their course assignments. The present paper focuses on one multilingual undergraduate student’s contract cheating experience, demonstrating her views on academic dishonesty and help seeking, and how she witnessed her multilingual peers engaging in contract cheating activities. Findings reveal that the participant’s learning might be driven by her attempts to maintain her academic status. Her participation in several paid tutorial services might be due to her bringing her own cultural values to post-secondary learning and trying to maximize her GPA as well as fulfil the learning needs of the courses she was taking. Important implications related to the present research encourage educators to revisit multilingual students’ learning needs related to academic misconduct and academic integrity in post-secondary education.https://ojs-o.library.ubc.ca/index.php/BCTJ/article/view/287EAL Learning NeedsPlagiarismTESOLAcademic MisconductEnglish as an additional languageAcademic IntegrityHigher Education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniel H. Chang
spellingShingle Daniel H. Chang
Academic Dishonesty in a Post-Secondary Multilingual Institution
BC TEAL Journal
EAL Learning Needs
Plagiarism
TESOL
Academic Misconduct
English as an additional language
Academic Integrity
Higher Education
author_facet Daniel H. Chang
author_sort Daniel H. Chang
title Academic Dishonesty in a Post-Secondary Multilingual Institution
title_short Academic Dishonesty in a Post-Secondary Multilingual Institution
title_full Academic Dishonesty in a Post-Secondary Multilingual Institution
title_fullStr Academic Dishonesty in a Post-Secondary Multilingual Institution
title_full_unstemmed Academic Dishonesty in a Post-Secondary Multilingual Institution
title_sort academic dishonesty in a post-secondary multilingual institution
publisher BC TEAL
series BC TEAL Journal
issn 2369-4211
publishDate 2018-10-01
description While plagiarism is a continuing educational writing issue in many post-secondary institutions, instances of contract cheating are also rising. Plagiarism is usually conceptualized as a type of writing misconduct or violation of existing institutional academic standards, but very little attention has been paid to contract cheating—when students seek paid tutors to write their course assignments. The present paper focuses on one multilingual undergraduate student’s contract cheating experience, demonstrating her views on academic dishonesty and help seeking, and how she witnessed her multilingual peers engaging in contract cheating activities. Findings reveal that the participant’s learning might be driven by her attempts to maintain her academic status. Her participation in several paid tutorial services might be due to her bringing her own cultural values to post-secondary learning and trying to maximize her GPA as well as fulfil the learning needs of the courses she was taking. Important implications related to the present research encourage educators to revisit multilingual students’ learning needs related to academic misconduct and academic integrity in post-secondary education.
topic EAL Learning Needs
Plagiarism
TESOL
Academic Misconduct
English as an additional language
Academic Integrity
Higher Education
url https://ojs-o.library.ubc.ca/index.php/BCTJ/article/view/287
work_keys_str_mv AT danielhchang academicdishonestyinapostsecondarymultilingualinstitution
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