Probing for Plagiarism in the Virtual Classroom
By Lindsey S. Hamlin and William T. Ryan
[Editor's note: Ryan and Hamlin will participate in a panel
session, "Academic Integrity in the Virtual Classroom" at Syllabus2003
on July 30. The original article posted May 1, 2003 has been expanded by conference proceedings submitted by the presenters. The udpated article is posted here.]
Virtual learning in higher education has seen enormous development in both public and private universities. In 2000, about 47 percent of U.S. colleges offered some form of distance learning. This figure will increase to almost 90 percent by the end of 2004 (Flisis, 2001).
Educators who are making the transition into online teaching are skeptical about the preservation of academic integrity in the virtual classroom. They often assume that Internet technology and online classrooms are providing students with additional opportunities to cheat. In reality, the probability that a student will cheat in an online course is about equal to the chances that a student will cheat in a traditional course (Carnevale, 1999). In fact, with the Web sites and software now available, educators have the ability to detect and battle plagiarism and cheating in virtual classrooms. Also, the various types of online assessment tools, assignments, and activities available within a virtual course (i.e. threaded discussions, virtual chats, quizzes, group presentations, etc.) are, by their very nature, a deterrent for cheating.
Virtual vs. Traditional Cheating
Unfortunately, cheating has always existed and will continue as long as there
is temptation to do so. In 2002, 47 students at Simon Fraser University turned
in nearly the same economics paper (Black, 2002). According to a 1999 study
conducted by the Center for Academic Integrity at Duke University, of the 2,100
students surveyed on 21 campuses across the country, "more than two-thirds of
the students admitted to one or more instances of serious cheating, such as
copying from another student on a test, plagiarizing or submitting work done
by another student" (Muha, 2000). Although these statistics show that cheating
remains a serious academic problem, it is unclear as to whether the Internet
has really changed the percentage of students who cheat.
Online Exams
While giving an exam in the traditional classroom, educators look for roaming
eyes and cheat sheets to identify cheaters. Yet, in an online classroom instructors
do not have the benefit of visually monitoring students during an exam. To compensate
for this problem, instructors can place time restrictions on exams or require
that exams be proctored by a college testing center or library. While creating
an online exam, instructors have the option of restricting the amount of time
the student has to complete the exam. When the time limit has expired, the exam
is automatically submitted to the instructor. This technique is most successful
at deterring cheaters when it is used in short, multiple-choice quizzes. For
example, if an exam consists of 10 multiple choice questions and a student has
nine minutes to complete the exam, the chances of the student looking up each
answer is slim because of the time restriction.
Instructors that require exams
to be proctored are gaining the same benefit of the visually monitored exam
in a traditional classroom. However, many testing centers charge students a
fee of up to $15 per hour for use of their facilities. In addition, if the class
perceives proctoring as an indication of the instructor's mistrust in his/her
students, it can markedly damage the student/teacher relationship. Some educators
have criticized proctoring as a "violation of the spirit of the honor code"
(Young, 2001).
Discussion Boards
Virtual skeptics have criticized online education for worsening a student's
sense of "isolation and anonymity" (Carnevale, 1999). From an outside perspective
this may seem true, however, virtual learning offers ways of communicating with
students and assessing their knowledge that extends beyond the traditional classroom.
Threaded discussions allow instructors to post discussion-type questions to
which students can respond. These discussions are not asynchronous, which allows
students to at their leisure within a given time period. Threaded discussions
encourage students to communicate, discuss, and debate topics with each other.
They also provide instructors with countless examples of a student's writing
style, which can be very useful in determining if a student has plagiarized
a paper. The benefit to these discussions, as opposed to live, in-class discussions,
is that students have the time and opportunity to research and thoroughly structure
their responses. Many times students will even provide Web links within the
discussion for other students to view. Because of this continuous research that
takes place during the threaded discussions, the quality of responses tends
to be much higher than that of traditional, classroom-based discussions. Along
with threaded discussions, instructors can assess students through virtual chat
or synchronous discussions. By requiring groups of students to meet at a predetermined
date and time in the online chat room and discuss a specified topic, students
begin to form working relationships with their classmates and instructor. The
time commitment required to participate in virtual chats and threaded discussions
is also a deterrent to online cheating.
Selected Anti-Plagiarism Sites
Plagiarism.com
Three software programs from Glatt Plagiarism Services Inc. www.plagiarism.com
Plagiarism.org
Self-described "online resource for educators concerned with the
growing problem of Internet plagiarism."
www.plagiarism.org
and www.turnitin.com
Plagiarized.com
"The Instructors Guide to Internet Plagiarism."
www.plagiarized.com
EVE (Essay Verification Engine)
A downloadable application that performs complex searches against
text, Microsoft Corp. Word files, and Corel Corp. WordPerfect files.
www.canexus.com
The Center for Academic Integrity
An association of more than 225 institutions that provides a forum
for identifying and promoting the values of academic integrity.
www.academicintegrity.org
What is Plagiarism?
Guidelines from the Georgetown University Honor Council.
www.georgetown.edu/honor/plagiarism.html
Avoiding Plagiarism
Guidelines from the Office of Student Judicial Affairs at the University
of California, Davis.
http://sja.ucdavis.edu/avoid.htm
Online Plagiarism
With the increasing number of online term-paper mills, such as Schoolsucks.com
and Cheater.com, students have an even greater temptation to plagiarize. Instead
of copying text out of books or journals by hand, students can now find an array
of term papers online and can copy and paste blocks of text right into their
word processors (Heberling, 2002). Deceitful students may also copy papers from
Web sites of conference proceedings or well-intentioned academics. As of March
2003, the Kimbel Library at Coastal Carolina University had identified 250 active
Internet term-paper and essay Web sites (Fain, 2003). A national survey conducted
by Donald McCabe, a professor of management at Rutgers University, found that
54 percent of students admitted to plagiarizing from the Internet; 74 percent
of students admitted that at least once during the past school year they had
engaged in "serious" cheating; and 47 percent of students believe their teachers
sometimes choose to ignore students who are cheating (Stricherz, 2001).
In the May-June 2002 issue of the Journal of College Student Development, Patrick M. Scanlon and David R. Neumann of the Rochester Institute of Technology reported their research findings on Internet plagiarism. Surprisingly, their research indicates that the proliferation of Internet plagiarism may not be as extensive as many may assume. The professors polled 698 undergraduate students at nine institutions of higher learning. Some 16.5 percent of the respondents reported plagiarizing "sometimes," while 50.4 percent claimed that their peers "often" or "very frequently" committed plagiarism. Slightly more respondents said they plagiarized conventional text more than online documents and almost 100 percent agreed that their peers plagiarized conventional text. Scanlon and Neumann concluded that more conventional plagiarism is occurring, while the growth of online plagiarism may not be significantly contributing to the growth of plagiarism in general (Kellogg, 2002). These statistics show that online access to papers has increased plagiarism in both the traditional and online classroom. However, because papers are submitted electronically in the virtual classroom, it is easier for online instructors to detect plagiarism by running student-submitted papers through plagiarism-detecting Web sites or software programs (Heberling, 2002).
Plagiarism-Detecting Web Sites
Plagiarism.org maintains a database of thousands of digitally fingerprinted
documents including papers obtained from term-paper mills. According to Plagiarism.org,
when an instructor uploads a student's paper to the site, the document's "fingerprint"
is cross-referenced against the local database containing hundreds of thousands
of papers. At the same time, automated Web crawlers are released to scour the
rest of the Internet for possible matches. The instructor receives a custom,
color-coded "originality report," complete with source links, for each paper.
For a fee, this service will detect papers that are entirely plagiarized, papers
that include plagiarism from different sources, or papers that have bits and
pieces of plagiarized text (www.plagiarism.org).
However, educators must remember that even though plagiarism-detecting software
can identify plagiarized text, it may not highlight the quotation marks surrounding
the text or the reference to the text within the paper. An overzealous professor
could hastily accuse a student of plagiarism by running their paper through
plagiarism-detecting software and then fail to revisit the paper to verify whether
the identified text was referenced.
Internet detection services, both fee-based and non-fee-based, are on the rise. Many educators would find this growth positive, however, a March 2002 article in The Chronicle of Higher Education reported that two plagiarism detection Web sites, PlagiServe.com and EduTie.com, appear to have ties to Web sites that sell term papers to students. Apparently, the companies that were checking student papers for plagiarism were then selling those same papers through its term-paper mills. Although the allegations were denied by both companies, the possible conflict of interest is a reminder to educators to be cautious in submitting student papers to unsubstantiated sites (Young, 2002).
Plagiarism-Detecting Software
Many software companies have developed innovative programs for detecting plagiarism.
Glatt Plagiarism Services Inc. produces the Glatt Plagiarism Screening Program,
which eliminates every fifth word of the suspected student's paper and replaces
the words with a blank space. The student is asked to supply the missing words.
The number of correct responses, the amount of time intervening, and various
other factors are considered in assessing the final Plagiarism Probability Score.
This program is based on Wilson Taylor's (1953) cloze procedure, which was originally
used to test reading comprehension (www.plagiarism.com).
Internet Search Engines
Educators may also find the more popular Internet search engines to be a useful
tool in plagiarism detection. Google, Yahoo, Excite, AskJeeves, HotBot, GoTo,
AltaVista, and MetaCrawler are just a few of the search engines that can aid
an instructor in detection. When an instructor suspects a student of copying
text or notices an inconsistency in a student's writing style, he or she can
enter the suspect phrase into the search engine. The search engine will return
a listing of all websites that contain an exact match of the entered text. Instructors
can broaden their results by searching a few different search engines (Heberling,
2002).
Preserving Academic Integrity
Educators are faced with the task of preserving academic integrity. Although
it is nearly impossible to eliminate cheating in traditional or virtual classrooms,
educators can deter it by using the tools available to them. Instructors who
advise their students that writing samples will be collected, term papers will
be filtered through plagiarism-detecting software, pop-quizzes will be given
throughout the semester, and that weekly participation in the discussion boards
is a class requirement are setting up a virtual environment that will deter
cheating.
References
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Carnevale, Dan. "How to Proctor From a Distance." The Chronicle
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Fain, Margaret, and Peggy Bates. "Cheating 101: Paper Mills and
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