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Who would students ask for help in academic cheating? Cross-sectional study of medical students in Croatia (CROSBI ID 213423)

Prilog u časopisu | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija

Đogaš, Varja ; Jerončić, Ana ; Marušić, Matko ; Marušić, Ana Who would students ask for help in academic cheating? Cross-sectional study of medical students in Croatia // BMC Medical Education, 14 (2014), 1048-1-1048-. doi: 10.1186/s12909-014-0277-y

Podaci o odgovornosti

Đogaš, Varja ; Jerončić, Ana ; Marušić, Matko ; Marušić, Ana

engleski

Who would students ask for help in academic cheating? Cross-sectional study of medical students in Croatia

Academic cheating does not happen as an isolated action of an individual but is most often a collaborative practice. As there are few studies that looked at who are collaborators in cheating, we investigated medical students’ readiness to engage others in academic dishonest behaviours. In a cross-sectional survey study in Zagreb, Croatia, 592 medical students from the first, 3rd and 6th (final) study year anonymously answered a survey of readiness to ask family, friends, colleagues or strangers for help in 4 different forms of academic cheating or for 2 personal material favours. Stepwise multiple linear regression models (MLR) were used to evaluate potential factors influencing propensity for engaging others in these two types of behaviour. Many students would ask another person for help in academic cheating, from 88.8% to 26.9% depending on a cheating behaviour. Students would most often ask a family member or friend for help in academic cheating. The same “helpers” were identified for non- academic related behaviour – asking for personal material favours. More respondents, however, would include three or four persons for asking help in academic cheating than for routine material favours. Score on material favours survey was the strongest positive predictor of readiness for asking help in academic cheating (stepwise MLR model ; beta=0.308, P<0.0001) followed by extrinsic motivation (compensation) and male gender, whereas intrinsic motivation, year of study and grade point average were weak negative predictors. Our study indicates that medical students are willing to engage more than one person in either close or distant relationships in academic cheating. In order to develop effective preventive measures to deter cheating at medical academic institutions, factors surrounding students’ preference towards academic cheating rather than routine favours should be further investigated.

cheating; medical education; motivation

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Podaci o izdanju

14

2014.

1048-1-1048-

objavljeno

1472-6920

10.1186/s12909-014-0277-y

Povezanost rada

Javno zdravstvo i zdravstvena zaštita

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