Some students get others to do their work even when they believe 鈥 often mistakenly 鈥 that they are breaking the law, an international study has found, casting doubt on the potential effectiveness of anti-contract cheating legislation.
Writing in the journal , Deakin University researchers say: 鈥淸Our]听findings beg the question: will such laws have any effect on changing student behaviour at听all?鈥
Australia, the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand and 17 US states prohibit the outsourcing of students鈥 work to third-party services, and the UK Parliament is considering the latest of a series of bills aiming to outlaw the provision or advertising of cheating services.
But while there has been considerable research into contract cheating, few studies have probed students鈥 attitudes to anti-cheating laws. The Deakin team surveyed more than 7,000 students on three continents about whether they thought outsourcing assignments should be illegal, and 鈥 if听so 鈥 whether the cheating services, students or both should be liable.
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More than three in five respondents thought cheating should be outlawed, with three-quarters of those saying both essay mills and their customers should be prosecuted.
Twenty-two per cent of respondents thought cheating was not against the law, with 24听per cent saying it听was and 54听per cent unsure. Yet views on legality made little difference to people鈥檚 propensity to cheat, with respondents proving only slightly more likely to admit to having outsourced their work if they did not think it was unlawful.
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Co-author Phillip Dawson, associate director of Deakin鈥檚 Centre for Research in Assessment and Digital Learning, said this was the most surprising finding. He had assumed that students who thought cheating was illegal 鈥減robably wouldn鈥檛 do听it鈥.
Their willingness to do so suggests that they do not expect to be caught 鈥 a听reasonable interpretation, with no听prosecutions reported so far in Australia or Ireland. New Zealand authorities launched proceedings against a听company thought to have earned NZ$1.1听million (拢558,000) from cheating but settled out of court, the paper says.
Professor Dawson said he was sceptical of legislation: 鈥淔or it to have real deterrent effect, there needs to be a perceived likelihood that it鈥檚 going to catch you, and there needs to be an understanding that the punishments are severe enough.鈥
He said universities needed to invest on two fronts. 鈥淥ne is promoting academic integrity and having frank and fearless conversations with students about cheating. And we need to take detection seriously. We need to resource听it. Academics who suspect cheating often don鈥檛 come forward because they think it鈥檚 going to be too hard or time-consuming to听prove. We need to address those issues.鈥
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Eighty-seven per cent of respondents said students should be targeted by anti-cheating laws, including a large proportion who admitted cheating themselves. 鈥淚鈥檇听be really concerned if we went down that line,鈥 Professor Dawson said.
He added: 鈥淯niversities are well placed to deal with student misconduct. Universities are not in as good a position to deal with the actions of large businesses, particularly multi-billion dollar companies.鈥
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:听Some cheat while thinking it鈥檚 illegal听
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