Experts have found that 50-75% of students self-report cheating at some point in their academic careers (Burrus, McGoldrick, & Schuhmann, 2007). While many studies report that students and teachers believe there is more cheating in online courses, in actuality, cheating in online courses is equivalent to the level of cheating in face-to-face courses (Miller & Young-Jones, 2012). There is nothing about online students or the online environment that makes cheating more likely; however, we do need to understand what academic cheating is and how it might occur. Consider, for instance, the story of an academic mercenary (a man who writes papers for a fee) as shared in the essay The Shadow Scholar from the Chronicle of Higher Education.
As shocking as stories like this may be, the part that we need to understand is what motivates students--both face-to-face and online--to cheat. In a three part series published in The Chronicle of Higher Education (Cheating Lessons, Pt 1; Cheating Lessons, Pt 2; Cheating Lessons, Pt 3), James M. Lang (2013) explored cheating by college students, finding that the testing environment we build may have a role in cheating. Additionally, when we rely solely on a few high stakes tests in our courses, students may feel more pressure, and thus more "need" to cheat. Lang (2013) concludes that "frequent assessment, coupled with a firm and consistent academic integrity policy, will help reduce cheating."
In the end, whether our students are online students or traditional students, some may be compelled to cheat. Part of this might be, however, that the nature of "knowing" is changing. Just as technology is changing our classes, it is changing how we consume and digest information. With facts available in mobile devices in our pockets, we no longer have to spend limited brain power memorizing "facts". Instead, we may want to consider shifting our emphasis from memorizing facts that can be easily googled, to strengthening strategies for critical thinking and analysis.
As Farrell (2015) notes, there are many strategies that help students leverage online tools and information while still providing challenging assessments. Here are a few more tips for designing thoughtful assessments:
Another strategy to reduce the potential for cheating in online assessments is to include questions that contain wording such as “the most appropriate” or “most important”. These types of question will measure students’ judgment skills, or understanding, of in-depth subject matter. For example in a nursing class, you could present students with a scenario of a patient seeking medical services detailing a set of specific symptoms and then ask the students to apply the most appropriate theory to the development of a treatment plan for the patient.
While instructors can take a variety of actions to help reduce the possibility of cheating in online assessments, studies have consistently found that students are less likely to cheat if course policies and consequences for cheating are clearly articulated and appropriately administered (Burrus, McGoldrick & Schuhmann, 2007). In the white paper "Are your online students really the ones registered for the course? Student authentication requirements for distance education providers." WCET provides the following recommendations to reduce cheating:
Content on these pages is adapted from