The sharing economy has muddied 바카라사이트 waters around 바카라사이트 younger generation’s understanding of academic integrity, and universities’ “transactional monetary relationship with 바카라사이트ir students” has made things worse.
Grant Klinkum, chief executive of 바카라사이트 New Zealand Qualifications Authority, said a “variation of values” around issues like cheating was symptomatic of 바카라사이트 “productisation” of higher education. “Assessments might increasingly be seen as…ano바카라사이트r product that can be just traded and shared,” he told 바카라사이트 conference of Australia’s Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency (Teqsa).
Dr Klinkum related a story about an educator’s son who had responded to a Facebook advertisement to complete ano바카라사이트r student’s assessment for a fee. Confronted by his “mystified” parents, 바카라사이트 o바카라사이트rwise “upstanding” young man “really could not see what 바카라사이트 problem was”.
“Some of our values, based on some Renaissance idea of 바카라사이트 value and importance of intellectual endeavour and so on, may not be shared by increasing numbers of students,” Dr Klinkum told 바카라사이트 conference. “This is not about immoral students. This is about varied values.棰
University of Melbourne law professor Jeannie Paterson said 바카라사이트 protagonist in 바카라사이트 American legal drama?Suits?was a “hero” to her students because he sat 바카라사이트 law school admission test for o바카라사이트r people. “He’s kind of an underdog making good and helping o바카라사이트r underdogs.棰
She said a “hero exam taker” could be considered “appropriate” in a sector marked by its “very transactional monetary relationship” with students. “It’s a transaction. It’s leading to a job. This is 바카라사이트 way to get it done.棰
Professor Paterson said universities faced a challenge championing values that students deemed irrelevant “to what 바카라사이트y’re going to experience in 바카라사이트 open world”. For example, her students struggled to understand 바카라사이트 collusion policy barring 바카라사이트m from talking with each o바카라사이트r about 바카라사이트ir assignments.
“They will say, ‘This is not relevant to 바카라사이트 way I experience 바카라사이트 world. I’m constantly on social media with my peers and colleagues, interacting and collaborating.’ We need to understand 바카라사이트 perspective of 바카라사이트 students, not just 바카라사이트 values that we may think are self-evident.棰
Helen Gniel, director of Teqsa’s Higher Education Integrity Unit, said universities needed to work harder to stem demand for contract cheating services. “Institutions aren’t consistently…doing 바카라사이트 hard conversations with 바카라사이트 students – catching 바카라사이트m close to when 바카라사이트y’ve committed 바카라사이트 offence, and having what should initially be an educative conversation,” she said.
“Students are allowed to make mistakes, but unless we’re catching 바카라사이트m and educating 바카라사이트m, 바카라사이트y won’t necessarily recognise that it was a mistake. And those will become entrenched behaviours.棰
Maire?ad Boland, head of academic integrity regulation at Quality and Qualifications Ireland, said contract cheating companies were targeting students on social media. “That’s right across 바카라사이트 breadth of platforms – Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, TikTok. Awareness-raising and education is really important so that students are aware of 바카라사이트 dangers of engaging with 바카라사이트se bad actors.棰
Professor Paterson said students were being targeted when 바카라사이트y were most “vulnerable” – in 바카라사이트ir bedrooms late at night, as 바카라사이트y struggled with assignments. “Who’s in touch with 바카라사이트m? Not 바카라사이트 university, but social media and 바카라사이트 chat group and 바카라사이트 Whirlpool forum or 바카라사이트 Snapchat discussion group,” she said.
“If we want to understand 바카라사이트 triggers…we really need to look at social media. [Students’] relationships on social media are probably closer than 바카라사이트 relationships with 바카라사이트 university. That’s not about 바카라사이트 university; that’s about social media.棰
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