Towards an Holistic Framework to Mitigate and Detect Contract Cheating within an Academic Institute—A Proposal
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Current institutional policies and procedures indicated that academic misconduct was identified and managed on an assignment-by-assignment basis. There was no transfer of knowledge about patterns and trends from one assignment to another, or from one unit to another, when identifying contract cheating cases. Therefore current approaches lacked sufficient evidence to form pattern analysis on students performance within a single unit or throughout a course. Pattern analysis is crucial for detecting contract cheating cases.
- While there are policies and procedures to handle academic integrity breaches, there is no comprehensive strategy or procedure to consistently handle contract cheating cases.
- Lack of specialised organisational units, such as an Academic Integrity Office (AIO), to handle contract cheating cases and ensure consistency within the institute needed to be addressed.
2. Determining Strategies to Detect Contract Cheating
2.1. Staff Upskilling
2.1.1. Staff Training to Improve Accuracy
- The time constraints faced by markers to complete grading and feedback. If markers evaluate students while students are taking their class, they need sufficient time to interview students to confirm the assignment was their own genuine effort. An adequate amount of time needs to be allocated for grading and further investigation to detect contract cheating, so that markers can apply various strategies if there are suspicious cases [12].
2.1.2. High-Profile Research to Educate Academics
2.2. Pattern Analysis
2.2.1. Software Analysis
2.2.2. Assessor Analysis
2.2.3. Specialised Administrative Staff Analysis
2.3. Assignment Design
3. Mitigate the Temptation to Cheat
3.1. Student Perspective
3.1.1. Formal Training to Improve Awareness
3.1.2. Informal Activities
3.1.3. Well-Equipped with Skills
3.2. Staff Perspective
3.2.1. Innovation in Curriculum and Assessment Design
3.2.2. Assignment Marking Strategies
3.3. Administrative Approaches
3.3.1. Academic Integrity Office (AIO)
3.3.2. IP Tracking and Other Technical Ways to Identify Contract Cheating
3.3.3. Allow Some Room for Late Submissions with Reduced Penalty
4. An Holistic Framework to Detect and Mitigate Opportunities for Contract Cheating
4.1. Three-Tier Framework (TTF)
- 1.
- Monitoring database: a centralised shareable database updated by academics for recording assignment marks, the progress of assignment monitoring, assessor input, and suspected activities,
- 2.
- Academic integrity breaches database: to record confirmed breaches by the AIO, and
- 3.
- Software analysis reports: obtained from authorship investigations or similar software from LMS and uploaded by specialised administrative staff in the AIO.
4.1.1. Level 1—Awareness
- Academic integrity including contract cheating
- Penalty associated with breaches
- Available student support services
- Support services available at Center of learning (CoL)
- Special consideration application process
- Inform new staff about contract cheating polices, procedures and services,
- Demonstrate trends, patterns and irregularities in potential cases with examples,
- Educate staff on assessment design, different evaluation techniques that can mitigate contract cheating cases, and
- Provide printed copies of institutional policies and a simple flow chart with the procedure they need to follow if they detect contract cheating.
4.1.2. Level 2—Monitor
- Ensuring that students are well equipped with the necessary skills and understand the assessment (Section 3.1).
- Allocating the last 30 min of laboratory classes to discussing A2 requirements until the due date.
- Recording student progress on A2 in PDT three times, as discussed in the next Step, and informing the student of this activity. This helps tutors to compare student performance and make students aware of the monitoring progress used for detection of contract cheating.
- Discussing the special consideration application process and other student support services available.
- Allowing late submission up to a specified number of days past the due date with a reduced penalty (Section 3.3.3).
- Preparing suitable assessment design by incorporating vivas, interviews or presentations for assignment evaluations (Section 2.3 and Section 3.2.2).
- Organising extra informal activities (Section 3.1) during the trimester, such as class discussions, lunch time activities, workshops, competitions, debates, research discussions, video presentations with real examples of penalties,
- Conducting sessions to enhance soft and hard skills to ensure students have the ability to do the assignment. (Section 3.1).
- Incorporating blended learning activities, such as pre-class quizzes, recorded lectures, and extra videos relevant to the topics to improve student confidence and, eventually, enhance enthusiasm for learning.
- Observe A2 progress and enter a numeric grade in the scale of one (1) (lowest) to 10 (highest) to record student’s progress on A2 (Section 2.2.2) three times. The numeric grade is recorded in PDT depending on assignment progress shown during the monitoring process.
- Calculate three-week average obtained by each student. The progress demonstration is considered successful if a student obtains five (5) or above as three-week average, otherwise it is considered unsuccessful.
- Categorise students into two groups: Group A and Group B. Tutors make an academic judgment and assign students to either Group A or Group B based on the following rule:Group A = Successful demonstration of A2 progress(three-weekaverage > 5) ANDno irregularities observed in OIS1 ANDgood class participationGroup B = Unsuccessful demonstration in class (three-weekaverage <= 5) OR irregularities observed in OIS1OR poor class participation
- The group of each student is recorded in PDT under the column “Group” before marking A2.
4.1.3. Level 3—Evaluation
5. Conclusions, Limitations and Future Works
5.1. Conclusions
5.2. Limitations
5.3. Future Works
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
A2 | Assignment 2 |
AIM100 | Academic Integrity Module 100 |
AIO | Academic Integrity Office |
CoL | Center of Learning |
FA | Formative Assignment |
ICT | In Class Test |
LMS | Learning Management System |
LOTE | Language Other than English |
OIS | Observed Irregularities Stage |
PDT | Pre-Designed Template |
TEQSA | The Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency |
TTF | Three-Tier Framework |
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Assessment Task | Due Date | Supervised |
---|---|---|
Formative Assignment (FA)-(5%) | Week 3 | No |
In Class Test (ICT)-(10%) | Week 5–8 | Yes |
Assignment 2 (A2)-(25% to 30%) | Week 11 | No |
Class Participation and Contribution-(15%) | Weekly | No |
Final Examination-(40–50%) | Week 13–14 | Yes |
Marks | Assessor Input | Progress—A2 | Marks | Assessor Input | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
FA | ICT | OIS1 | Comment | A2 | A2 | A2 | Group | A2 | OIS2 | Comment |
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Guruge, D.B.; Kadel, R. Towards an Holistic Framework to Mitigate and Detect Contract Cheating within an Academic Institute—A Proposal. Educ. Sci. 2023, 13, 148. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13020148
Guruge DB, Kadel R. Towards an Holistic Framework to Mitigate and Detect Contract Cheating within an Academic Institute—A Proposal. Education Sciences. 2023; 13(2):148. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13020148
Chicago/Turabian StyleGuruge, Deepani B., and Rajan Kadel. 2023. "Towards an Holistic Framework to Mitigate and Detect Contract Cheating within an Academic Institute—A Proposal" Education Sciences 13, no. 2: 148. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13020148
APA StyleGuruge, D. B., & Kadel, R. (2023). Towards an Holistic Framework to Mitigate and Detect Contract Cheating within an Academic Institute—A Proposal. Education Sciences, 13(2), 148. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13020148