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Impact of Policies for Plagiarism in HE across Europe

Impact of Policies for Plagiarism in HE across Europe. Irene Glendinning Principal Investigator and project leader. 510321-LLP-1-2010-1-UK-ERASMUS-EMHE. Lead Partner :   Coventry University , United Kingdom; Aleksandras Stulginskis University , Lithuania

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Impact of Policies for Plagiarism in HE across Europe

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  1. Impact of Policies for Plagiarism in HE across Europe Irene Glendinning Principal Investigator and project leader 510321-LLP-1-2010-1-UK-ERASMUS-EMHE

  2. Lead Partner:   Coventry University, United Kingdom; AleksandrasStulginskis University, Lithuania Coordinator: Dr Linas Stabingis email: linas_lzuu@yahoo.com Mendel University, Czech Republic Coordinator: Dr Tomáš Foltýnek email: foltynek@pef.mendelu.cz Technical University of Lodz, Poland Coordinator: Agnieszka Michałowska-Dutkiewiczemail: agnieszka.michalowska-dutkiewicz@p.lodz.pl University of Nicosia, Cyprus Coordinator: Dr Catherine Demoliou email: demoliou.c@unic.ac.cy Project Consultant: Jude Carroll, Educational Consultant, UK Project Conference Sponsors: Turnitin / iParadigms / IS4U

  3. Small beginnings… June 2009 Oct 2009 Feb 2010 June 2011 Oct 2010 July 2010 Oct 2011 Jan 2012 Sept 2012 Sept 2013 June 2013 Jan 2013 Dec 2013 Mar 2014 Jun 2014

  4. IPPHEAE Aims and Objectives • Identify what is being done to combat plagiarism in HE institutions across Europe • Develop tools and resources • Capture case studies of good practice • Support interventions for preventing / detecting plagiarism • Recommend ways to discourage, find and deal with plagiarism and academic dishonesty • Improve standards and quality in HE institutions across Europe and beyond

  5. Research and Development ANTON – software tool development Survey across EU countries Case studies – exploitation Materials, resources developed Analysis, reporting Dissemination

  6. Survey Outputs • Institutions: 3 questionnaires, 14 languages • Student focus groups • National/senior management structured interviews • Almost 5,000 anonymous responses • Separate reports for all 27 EU countries • Executive summary • Details of research • Analysis of results • Recommendations • Academic Integrity Maturity Model • EU-wide comparison of policies • Tested survey questions – for reuse

  7. Summary of findings • Great differences between countries and institutions • Approaches to quality assurance • Perceptions, awareness – especially what is plagiarism • Policies and procedures • Inconsistency in • Understanding • Accountability for decisions • Processes • Transparency • Good practice – lots of it • Head in the sand – lots of it • Not everyone accepts there is need for change • Maturity of policies and systems • Nationally, regionally, institutionally

  8. Student Responses

  9. Teacher responses: Are cases of plagiarism handled consistently and fairly? I believe that all teachers follow the same procedures for similar cases of plagiarism

  10. Findings EU: Policies and procedures • Sweden and Austria maintain national stats, but … • Focus on research and PhD students, not bachelor, masters in some countries • UK and Ireland different, eg transparency • Students and most teachers calling for more student training and information • But not all teachers want CPD, “training” • Separating V Integrating student guidance • Use and abuse of digital tools – teachers, students

  11. Questions for you • What policies and systems need to be in place for upholding academic integrity in higher education institutions (HEIs)? • What are the characteristics of “mature” policies for upholding academic integrity in HEIs? • What role should national quality assurance organisations have regarding academic integrity and plagiarism policies in HEIs?

  12. Academic Integrity Maturity Model (AIMM)

  13. Republic of Ireland Academic Integrity Maturity Model profile Overall AIMM score 18.94 / 36, Ranking 4th out of 27 countries Based on responses from 82 students, 14 teachers, 3 senior/national and 3 student focus groups

  14. Republic of Ireland Strengths and opportunities • Good appreciation of threats to academic standards • Special units established at some institutions • Effective software tools used by most institutions • Good training for staff and students, egPgCert • Expertise utilised and shared

  15. Republic of Ireland Weaknesses and threats • Maturity of policies and systems varies • Some overconfidence about effectiveness of policies • Inconsistent application of policies internally in some institutions • Overestimation of students’ skills and knowledge for academic integrity • No national system for oversight

  16. Recommendations for Europe Reduce variation across countriesand institutions in: • National support for institution-wide strategies, including licenses for digital tools • Accountability and consistency in QA, assessment grading and academic integrity • Clear and transparent institution-wide policies and systems • Agreement on what constitutes plagiarism • Fairness and proportionality of sanctions • Education and training, staff and students Need to promote • Comparability of statistics to monitor impact • Funding for further dissemination, developments • Pre-university understanding and practices

  17. Challenges to future progress • What could change, what would be possible? • Reaching the right people to kick-start change • Gaps: low participation, institutions and countries • Autonomy institutionally and individually • Overworked, underpaid academics, second jobs • Large class sizes, under-investment • Scale of change needed in some places • Complacency, lack of interest • Costs in current economic climate • Fear of identification, exposure • Shoot the whistle-blower mentality • Lack of agreement about how to proceed • Not viewed as a priority

  18. What’s next? • EU-wide and 27 country reports available on http://ippheae.eu • Case studies available on request • Examples of good practice in plagiarism prevention and management • Access to project resources: workshops, quiz • Applied for further funding via Erasmus+ • Disseminate information to people of influence and try to get buy-in • Interventions, workshops seminars • Scope for more research and analysis of existing data and use of research tools

  19. Thank you! ireneg@coventry.ac.uk Ippheae.ec@coventry.ac.uk http://ippheae.eu 510321-LLP-1-2010-1-UK-ERASMUS-EMHE

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