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This book discusses the issue of academic misconduct and
publication ethics in general and plagiarism in particular, with a
focus on case studies in various universities around the world
(notably in Japan, Singapore, Australia, USA, and Canada). We are
especially interested in students' and teachers' perception of
academic misconduct and their definition and understanding of
plagiarism. Most chapters discuss undergraduates' understanding of
academic dishonesty and students' experiences using plagiarism
softwares. The book also analyzes teachers' perception of cheating
and how they respond to it. Writing is perceived by all of the
teachers to be the most important form of assessment that required
preventative measures in order to reduce the occurrence of academic
dishonesty among students. Each chapter recommends strategies to
fight plagiarism, such as establishing guidelines and regulations
concerning academic integrity, awareness of the scale of the issue
(scandals at all levels in most countries, even including famous
scholars, administrators, and elected officials), assessing the
damage done to academic reputation and credibility, developing
trust and credibility on social media (especially with the recent
disturbing growth of fake news and data), minimizing the
proliferation of dishonest accreditation, of identity theft, of
fake peer-reviews, and fighting the growing number of fake papers,
with or without the use of computer-generated academic works.
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