Dishonesty in the classroom and its link to the pursuit of academic excellence

A controlled experiment was conducted with a cohort of graduate accounting students, which involved a mild form of deception during a class ethics quiz. One of the answers to a difficult question was inadvertently revealed by a visiting scholar, which allowed students an opportunity to use the answe...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Woodbine, Gordon, Amirthalingam, Vimala
Other Authors: Joseph Bonnici
Format: Conference Paper
Published: General Commercial Publisher: International Journal of Arts & Sciences 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42146
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author Woodbine, Gordon
Amirthalingam, Vimala
author2 Joseph Bonnici
author_facet Joseph Bonnici
Woodbine, Gordon
Amirthalingam, Vimala
author_sort Woodbine, Gordon
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description A controlled experiment was conducted with a cohort of graduate accounting students, which involved a mild form of deception during a class ethics quiz. One of the answers to a difficult question was inadvertently revealed by a visiting scholar, which allowed students an opportunity to use the answer in order to maximise test scores and qualify for a reward. Despite an attempt to sensitize students prior to the test to the importance of moral codes of conduct, a high incidence of cheating was reported. Students who took the opportunity to cheat were more condoning of the behaviour compared to control group members and students who did not use the disclosed answer and this difference in attitudes was consistent regardless of the intensity of the issue specified in the survey. A logistic regression indicated that cheating was more likely to occur amongst students who appeared to excel, although this was offset to some extent by their level of religious commitment. The cognitive dissonance associated with the academic dishonesty is believed to reveal behavioural orientations that reflect conscious and unconscious concerns about not achieving satisfactory standards of performance. These perceived fears and apprehensions result in inappropriate behaviours and appear to be unaffected by standard forms of ethics intervention.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-421462017-01-30T14:57:45Z Dishonesty in the classroom and its link to the pursuit of academic excellence Woodbine, Gordon Amirthalingam, Vimala Joseph Bonnici accounting students academic misbehaviour cognitive dissonance opportunism A controlled experiment was conducted with a cohort of graduate accounting students, which involved a mild form of deception during a class ethics quiz. One of the answers to a difficult question was inadvertently revealed by a visiting scholar, which allowed students an opportunity to use the answer in order to maximise test scores and qualify for a reward. Despite an attempt to sensitize students prior to the test to the importance of moral codes of conduct, a high incidence of cheating was reported. Students who took the opportunity to cheat were more condoning of the behaviour compared to control group members and students who did not use the disclosed answer and this difference in attitudes was consistent regardless of the intensity of the issue specified in the survey. A logistic regression indicated that cheating was more likely to occur amongst students who appeared to excel, although this was offset to some extent by their level of religious commitment. The cognitive dissonance associated with the academic dishonesty is believed to reveal behavioural orientations that reflect conscious and unconscious concerns about not achieving satisfactory standards of performance. These perceived fears and apprehensions result in inappropriate behaviours and appear to be unaffected by standard forms of ethics intervention. 2012 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42146 General Commercial Publisher: International Journal of Arts & Sciences restricted
spellingShingle accounting students
academic misbehaviour
cognitive dissonance
opportunism
Woodbine, Gordon
Amirthalingam, Vimala
Dishonesty in the classroom and its link to the pursuit of academic excellence
title Dishonesty in the classroom and its link to the pursuit of academic excellence
title_full Dishonesty in the classroom and its link to the pursuit of academic excellence
title_fullStr Dishonesty in the classroom and its link to the pursuit of academic excellence
title_full_unstemmed Dishonesty in the classroom and its link to the pursuit of academic excellence
title_short Dishonesty in the classroom and its link to the pursuit of academic excellence
title_sort dishonesty in the classroom and its link to the pursuit of academic excellence
topic accounting students
academic misbehaviour
cognitive dissonance
opportunism
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42146