Promoting Academic Integrity through a Stand-alone Course in the Learning Management System
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Abstract
Introduction: This case study describes the process faculty at a large research university undertook to build a stand-alone online academic integrity course for first-year and transfer students. Because academic integrity is decentralized at the institution, building a more systematic program had to come from the bottom-up (faculty developed) rather than from the top down (institutionally mandated).
Case Description: Using the learning management system, faculty and e-learning designers collaborated to build the course. Incorporating nuanced scenarios for six different types of misconduct (consistent with the University’s Code of Student Rights, Responsibilities & Conduct), a pre- and post-test, and assessments for each scenario, the course provides experience in recognizing and avoiding academic misconduct.
Discussion and Evaluation: As a stand-alone course, the faculty who created it maintain control over content and are able to analyze student performance across the institution. In the ten months since its launch, the course has been eagerly adopted by faculty (n=1853 students have completed the course) and post-test scores indicate students are learning from the course.
Conclusions: After the successful launch of the student course, the next step, already underway, is the launch of learning modules for faculty and teaching-assistants.