Who cheats at university? A self-report study of dishonest academic behaviours in a sample of Australian university students
Article first published online: 2 FEB 2011
DOI: 10.1080/00049530412331283426
2005 Australian Psychological Society
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How to Cite
Marsden, H., Carroll, M. and Neill, J. T. (2005), Who cheats at university? A self-report study of dishonest academic behaviours in a sample of Australian university students. Australian Journal of Psychology, 57: 1–10. doi: 10.1080/00049530412331283426
Publication History
- Issue published online: 2 FEB 2011
- Article first published online: 2 FEB 2011
- Abstract
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The present study investigated the dishonest academic behaviours of Australian university students (N = 954) and their relationships with demographic factors, academic policy advised to students, academic self-efficacy, and academic orientation. It was hypothesised that higher levels of dishonesty would be associated with low learning-orientation, high grade-orientation, low academic self-efficacy and nonreceipt of information about the rules of cheating and plagiarism. Descriptive analyses revealed high levels of three types of self-reported academic dishonesty: cheating, plagiarism and falsification. Regression analyses revealed demographic variables, academic orientation and academic self-efficacy to have differential predictive value for the three types of dishonesty, underlining the argument that it is misleading to measure academic dishonesty as a unidimensional construct. The results are discussed in terms of implications for strategic interventions and university policy formulation.

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