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1-10 of 16 results

  • Newspaper

    Plagiarism cases surge 10% following the shift to remote learning

    Canada, France, Germany, India, Netherlands, UK

    Press

    - Education Technology

    A survey on plagiarism conducted by Copyleaks collected responses from 31,000 colleges and 20,000 high school students worldwide. The study shows that the largest increase in plagiarized submissions was recorded in the Netherlands, with 26% of cases before COVID compared to 45% after the pandemic, i.e. a total increase of 19%. This was followed by France (37% before vs. 49% after, i.e. - a 12% jump), closely followed by India (42% before vs. 53% after; i.e.- an 11% jump). The UK, Canada and Germany all saw a 4% increase in plagiarism cases.

  • Newspaper

    Plagiarism, theft, misappropriation of theses

    France

    Press

    Alice Raybaud - Le Monde

    When a doctoral student denounced the theft of her work, she was told that it was part of the game. One in five PhD students in the academic world is facing this practice. According to an online survey conducted among 1,800 PhD students and young doctors, 21% of respondents said they had seen someone else take credit for their work. Concerned about the impact on their future careers, many PhD students choose to remain silent on such abuse.

  • Open budgeting: an illustrative form of open government

    As part of its research project on ‘Open government (OG) in education: Learning from experience’, the UNESCO International Institute for Educational Planning (IIEP) has prepared five thematic briefs illustrating various forms of OG as applied to the...

    Poisson, Muriel

    Paris, IIEP-UNESCO, 2021

  • Promouvoir et protéger une culture partagée de l’intégrité scientifique

    À l’été 2019, dans un contexte d’affaires de « méconduites scientifiques » particulièrement médiatisées, la commission de la culture, de l’éducation et de la communication du Sénat a saisi l’OPECST afin que la représentation nationale soit éclairée...

    Henriet, Pierre, Ouzoulias, Pierre

    Paris, Assemblée Nationale, 2021

  • Newspaper

    Stealing other people’s writing just got harder

    France, Netherlands, India

    Press

    Brian Blum - Isreael21c

    A survey of 51,000 college and high school students reveals that the average percentage of plagiarism before and after Covid increased from 26% to 45% in the Netherlands, from 37% to 49% in France and from 42% to 53% in India. The new anti-plagiarism software CopyLeaks uses Artificial Intelligence to detect plagiarism and copyright infringement. CopyLeaks can be used as a site license purchased by a school, institution, or publication, by individual writers who pay based on the number of words and pages checked.

  • Scientific integrity referents: the example of Inserm in France

    Ghislaine Filliatreau

    0 comments

  • Méconduites académiques: exploration d’une distinction potentielle de genres

    Le biais de genre, largement investigué en sciences sur les aspects positifs tels que l’obtention de financements ou les publications, reste inexploré sur les aspects « négatifs » de la science comme les mauvaises pratiques académiques : si les...

    Sèdes, Florence, Decullier, Evelyne

    Institut de recherche et d’action sur la fraude et le plagiat académiques, 2022

  • Les Thèses de complaisance: de l’acceptabilité d’un écart à l’intégrité académique

    Nous avons mené deux études afin d’identifier pourquoi les universitaires acceptent de décerner un titre prestigieux à des travaux non conformes aux attendus. À travers des entretiens semi-directifs conduits auprès de 19 universitaires, la première...

    Magali Bringuier, Magali, Decullier, Evelyne, Malec, David, Py, Jacques

    Institut de recherche et d’action sur la fraude et le plagiat académiques, 2022

  • Newspaper

    How the "fauxdiplomes.org" website was shut down

    France

    Press

    - Le Journal du Dimanche

    A forger spotted in 2019 by the Ministry of Higher Education has been charged with forgery, counterfeiting and sale of official documents, fraud and money laundering. Since 2015, he had been selling fake diplomas by the thousands at €200 each. With the complicity of a taxi-ambulance driver who photographed patients' documents, he bought pre-paid cards under these false identities, which were then paid for by electronic transfers by the purchasers of the false diplomas via their own pre-paid cards.

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