Cheating in British secondary schools has not been previously researched. The aim of this
thesis was to ascertain what factors affect cheating in secondary school and why? Initially, four
questions were posed: "what is cheating?', "when is it wrong to cheat?', 'what role do parents play'
and 'what are teacher perceptions of cheating compared with those of students?'. These questions
were addressed by studying the perspectives of students, parents and teachers using a mixture of
quantitative and qualitative methodologies, involving nearly 1000 respondents in six studies.
Two models were developed. The first, a four dimensional model, explained what students
thought cheating was. Cheating was perceived to be comprised of the following interrelated
dimensions: non-academic and academic behaviours, a temporal component, assessment events
and degrees of severity.
The second, a decision model, indicated under what circumstances cheating might be right
or wrong. Cheating was wrong for respondents who perceived only negative academic
associations, whilst It could be right for others, when motives for cheating were perceived to be
honourable. Respondents reported the extent to which they were like students in scenarios who
were portrayed to have cheated in a variety of ways.
Data from parents and teachers were used to test and amplify these models. Students and
teachers held similar perceptions regarding cheating frequency, but not severity. Parents held
perceptions of cheating that were more extreme than those of students and teachers.
The findings of these studies have major implications for those involved in the wider
educational environments of the home, school and society. Recommendations are made regarding
cun-ent educational testing policies, the promotion of leaming and the reduction of cheating.
Date of Award | 2001 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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WHAT FACTORS AFFECT CHEATING IN SECONDARY SCHOOL AND WHY?
ARMSTEAD, P. K. (Author). 2001
Student thesis: PhD