Cheating in School: What We Know and What We Can DoISBN: 978-1-4051-7805-1
Hardcover
272 pages
August 2009, Wiley-Blackwell
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Other Available Formats: Paperback
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"A comprehensive look at the cheating phenomenon from primary through graduate school." (Faculty Focus, October 2009)
"[The authors] combine their years of interest in and experience with issues of academic integrity to provide an overview of the problem of academic dishonesty at all levels of education.... This is the first attempt to synthesize all levels and several nations in a concise, readable format accessible to the general reader.The authors cite plenty of real-world examples and suggest usable tactics and strategies ... thus making the book useful for educators as well as lay readers.... A great overview of a significant subject, accessibly accomplished." (Library Journal, October 2009)
"I found Cheating in School to be a good read.... I recommend this book to both faculty and administrators who must deal with this issue in their work." (International Higher Education Consulting Blog, October 2009)
"Although much of the specific advice in the book is U.S. focused, the genuine and broad-ranging vision offered by the authors make the lessons applicable internationally." (International Journal for Educational Integrity, June 2009)
"In a high-stakes society where the ends are often valued more than the means, cheating has permeated all levels of education. This book is a must-have for anyone wishing to understand the causes of cheating and find ways to prevent its occurrence."–Bryan K. Saville, James Madison University
"Cheating in School provides a compelling call to action.
Rather than simply sensationalizing individual cases of cheating,
it provides a broad and balanced perspective and outlines
reasonable short and long-term actions we can all take."
–Lauren Scharff, Ph.D, Director of the Center
for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL), U. S. Air
Force Academy
"This book combines the work of experienced authors who have
unique knowledge of different facets of academic integrity and its
attendant problems. Working together, they have created a volume
that brings together the various stakeholders concerned with
academic cheating. They articulate the problem and define it in all
its myriad forms, from the student who copies another’s exam
to the parent who 'helps' more than she should.
The book prompts the reader to wonder why cheating is not central
to the 21st-century education agenda, and how our values become
circumvented or distorted in relation to this issue."
–Ken Keith, University of San Diego
"Cheating in school: What we know and what we can do, is
perhaps the most comprehensive and accessible text on the topic of
academic integrity that I have read. What makes this book
special is the clear intention of the authors to look beyond the
individual to the broader institutional and societal milieu within
which student cheating occurs, but always with clearly articulated
optimism. Stephen Davis, Patrick Drinan and Tricia Bertram Gallant
should be congratulated on this carefully and elegantly constructed
presentation of the field."
–Tracey Bretag, Editor, International Journal for
Educational Integrity, University of South Australia