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31-40 of 602 results

  • Newspaper

    In Senegal, the answers to the baccalaureate were available on WhatsApp before the exams took place

    Senegal

    Press

    Amadou Ndiaye - Le Monde

    Massive leaks have discredited the country’s education system. The French, history and geography tests will resume on 10 July. At the Immaculate Conception School of Dakar, a candidate for the baccalaureate was caught by the exam supervisor as he was consulting the answers to the history and geography tests on his laptop. This discovery of cheating at the Immaculate Conception School triggered a tsunami that is now shaking up the entire Senegalese education system.

  • Newspaper

    Cheating during finals: behind the cheat-sheet

    France

    Press

    Corentin Lacoste - M le magazine du Monde

    Some students pass their exams by sheer luck, others may do so thanks to their connected watch. This concentration of technology is the 2017 version of notes hidden up a sleeve, and is the object of choice for those wishing to solve equations while appearing to count the minutes. Watches, calculators, smartphones ... all are now on the radar of exam organizers and supervisors. 911 suspected instances of cheating were identified during the 2016 exam period, with more than half followed by sanctions.

  • Newspaper

    ‘Endemic’ Cheating in Ukraine

    Ukraine

    Press

    David Matthews - Times Higher Education

    The scale of student misconduct in Ukraine has been exposed by a survey of undergraduates that found nearly half have paid bribes and almost all admitted to plagiarism and cheating on exams. Of 600 students surveyed at public universities in Lviv -- a city in the west of Ukraine seen as relatively uncorrupt -- 48 percent had paid bribes. Bribery was far more common for compulsory modules like physical education and workplace safety, and professional programs like business, law and medicine, it found.

  • Newspaper

    Huge rise in students caught cheating in Welsh universities revealed

    UK

    Press

    Shane Brennan - Daily Post

    The number of students caught cheating in Welsh universities has risen by almost 50% in two years. The president of the students’ union at Bangor University said the rise was down to better monitoring of students’ work rather than a new trend. According to the deputy president of NUS Wales, students often cheat because “they’re facing an incredible amount of pressure and they don’t feel able to seek the support they need”. She encourages students considering academic malpractice to reach out, as help is available.

  • Newspaper

    Don’t dishonour doctorates

    Malaysia

    Press

    Yuen Meikeng - The Star

    With some using unscrupulous ways just to get titles and academic qualifications, the Government is stepping up its efforts to prevent another avenue from being misused – honorary doctorates. The usage of the honorary “Dr” title is limited to within the awarding university, recipients aren’t allowed to put the “Dr” title in front of their names in public. As a reminder to be vigilant about any misrepresentation and use of fraudulent awards, the Higher Education Ministry sent out guidelines in March on the issuance of honorary doctorates.

  • Newspaper

    Changes to HSC English exams will 'fuel tutoring industry'

    Australia

    Press

    Alexandra Smith - Sydney Morning Herald

    Leading English academics and former HSC chief examiners have warned that plans to make HSC English exams shorter and put word limits on answers will make it easier for students to game the system and will "further fuel the HSC tutoring industry". The submission warns that the tutoring industry would benefit from the introduction of shorter answers because students would pay to be taught how to "memorise and then reproduce" 600-word responses for their exams.

  • Newspaper

    Bac 2017: the questions for the technological philosophy exam have been leaked ... and the subjects of relief also

    France

    Press

    Mathilde Goupil - Nouvelle Observateur

    One blunder after another for the 2017 edition of the baccalaureate exam. After potential leaks of subjects of physics-chemistry and Life/Earth Sciences (series S) at the end of May, it is the philosophy questions of the technological exams that have been leaked on the eve of the test. The ministry has reminded students that the new questions "do not change the conditions of the test", but some internet users confirm that they had already started to write their answers to the initial questions before the backup questions were given to them. As for the backups, they were broadcast on Twitter this Thursday morning almost an hour and fifteen too soon ...

  • Newspaper

    Bac 2017: opening of an investigation into possible subject leaks

    France

    Press

    - L’OBS

    the Ministry of Education has launched an inquiry into possible leaks of physics-chemistry and Life/Earth Sciences (SVT) questions for the scientific baccalaureate. The leaks reportedly involved experimental competency assessment questions for the section S, that is, organized practical workshops in physics and SVT. Until the close of the inquiry, the ministry is withholding comment on the exactitude and the extent of these "possible leaks of the evaluation materials", which were reported by a teacher.

  • Newspaper

    Record number of Swedish university students caught cheating

    Sweden

    Press

    - The Local

    A growing number of students are being suspended from Swedish universities because they have been caught cheating.In its review of 33 universities in Sweden, TT newswire found 733 students had been suspended due to cheating in 2016. A recurring question, which is difficult to answer, is whether a high number of suspensions is due to extensive cheating, or the result of a persistent hunt for cheaters. According to the same logic, it is difficult to know if few suspensions means a university has few cheaters, or if it is simply bad at catching them.

  • Academic corruption: culture and trust in Indian higher education

    Singular acts of academic corruption, such as cheating on an exam, occur in all institutions in all countries.Until recently, however, academic corruption that is systemic has been under-studied and under-theorized. This article focuses exclusively...

    Tierney, William G.;Sabharwal, Nidhi S.

    2017

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