Multimedia Resources on Academic Integrity
- Lawrence M. Hinman
- "How to Fight College Cheating."
Washington Post, September 3, 2004. A19.
- "Academic Integrity and the World Wide Web,"
Computers and Society, Vol. 31, No. 1 (March 2002), pp. 33-42.
- "Virtual Virtues," "The Impact of the Internet on Our Moral Lives in Academia,"
Ethics and Information Technology, Volume 4 no. 1 (February 2002), pp. 31-35.
- "Academic
Integrity and the World Wide Web."
Workshop presentation at the 10th
Annual Meeting of the Center for Academic Integrity,
Colorado Springs, November,
2000.
- "Download Your Workload, Offload Your Integrity,"
Los Angeles Times November 15, 1999, Monday, Metro; Part B; Page 7; Op Ed Desk.
- "Cultivating Integrity to Combat Plagiarism,"
San Diego Union-Tribune, October 2, 1997
- "Virtual
Virtues: Academic Integrity and the World Wide Web."
Center
for Academic Integrity 9th Annual Conference. Duke University.
October 16, 1999.
- "Academic Integrity
and the World Wide Web"
CEPE2000 Computer Ethics: Philosophical Enquiry
Dartmouth College July 14-16, 2000
- Don McCabe
- Keynote
Address
An Overview of Research on Academic Integrity
11th Annual Meeting Center for Academic Integrity
- Gen. Malham M. Wakin, USAF, Ret.
- Keynote
Address
10th Annual Meeting Center for Academic Integrity
Colorado Springs, Colorado November, 2000
- Don McCabe & Susan Stearns
- Research
Update
10th Annual Meeting Center for Academic Integrity
Colorado Springs, Colorado November, 2000
- Elizabeth Kiss & Gary Pavela
- Ethical
Development
10th Annual Meeting Center for Academic Integrity
Colorado Springs, Colorado November, 2000
Internet Resources on Academic Integrity
General
- Center for
Academic Integrity, Kenan Institute for Ethics, Duke University
- TurnItIn.com
- Talk
of the Nation: Cheating in Schools, with
- Louis Bloomfield, Professor of Physics, University of Virginia
-
Don McCabe, Founding President, Center for Academic Integrity, Duke
University. Professor of Management Studies, Rutgers University
-
Thomas Hall, Senior at the University of Virginia, Chair of the University
of Virginia Honor Committee
-
Advances in technology have changed he way students learn, and in some
cases, how they cheat. Experts say the number of students turning in
term papers downloaded from the internet is on the rise. But technology
is also helping professors weed out cheaters in the classroom. And new
computer programs are helping to find plagiarists. Is cheating on the
rise in colleges?
On-line Academic Integrity Codes
On-line Honor Codes
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