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Avoiding plagiarism, developing identities: Responsibility, academic literacies and the curriculum

Gourlay, Lesley; Greig, Janis

Authors

Lesley Gourlay

Janis Greig



Abstract

The incidence of plagiarism and other forms of academic misconduct has become a cause for concern across the higher education sector in recent years. A range of factors have been identified as contributing to the incidence of plagiarism, and institutions have responded in variety of ways to tackle the issue in terms of education and prevention. Arguably, first year undergraduates represent a section of the student body which should receive particular attention in this respect, as they enter an unfamiliar educational context, which presents new and complex demands. This report describes a small-scale JISCPAS-funded project which investigated the experiences and perspectives of first year students and key staff groups at a Scottish post-92 university, focusing on the development of year 1 students‟ academic literacies, their experiences of coursework and their awareness of appropriate academic practice. A variety of data collection methods were employed including literature review, semi-structured interviews, journals, and focus groups. The study highlighted some key differences between staff in different roles in terms of how they view their own and the institution‟s responsibilities in this area, and in the extent to which they believe development should be generic or discipline-specific. The data also suggest the presence of an implicit staff model which constructs antiplagiarism strategies as separate and unrelated to other aspects of academic writing development. The student data documented the central role of confidence, emotion and identity in the student experience, and highlighted a range of issues across the university in terms of how we should support coursework and develop student academic literacies.
The report concludes with suggestions for development of institutional and individual academic practice in this area, to better support the development of first year student literacies and confidence within the curriculum.

Citation

Gourlay, L., & Greig, J. (2007). Avoiding plagiarism, developing identities: Responsibility, academic literacies and the curriculum. JISC

Report Type Research Report
Publication Date 2007
Deposit Date May 20, 2009
Publicly Available Date May 20, 2009
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Keywords plagiarism; academic misconduct; academic literacy; academic practice;
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/id/eprint/2612
Contract Date May 20, 2009

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