Abstract
AbstractHigher education academic integrity policies are varied, and similarly, the language regarding the act of fabricating citations can be diverse and subjective. With recent calls to align academic integrity policies with practice, the aim of this paper is to gain a better understanding of how the act of fabricating citations is presented in higher education academic integrity policies by conducting a two-phase content analysis of the web-based, academic conduct policies for undergraduate students at public institutions of higher education in the State of New Jersey. The first phase consisted of a conceptual analysis for language regarding the act of fabricating citations. The second phase consisted of a thematic analysis of the policies that included language regarding the fabrication of citations. This study finds several potential issues. Policies that lack language regarding the fabrication of citations fail to communicate it as a prohibited act, and some policies that include language regarding the fabrication of citations use ambiguous terminology that is subjective, exclusive examples that fail to include all acts of citation fabrication, or phrasing that fails to align with the following commonly used writing styles: American Psychological Association (APA), Chicago Manual of Style (CMOS), and Modern Language Association (MLA).
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference76 articles.
1. Alkaissi, H., & McFarlane, S. I. (2023). Artificial hallucinations in ChatGPT: Implications in scientific writing. Cureus, 15(2), e35179. https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.35179
2. American Psychological Association. (2010). Publication manual of the American Psychological Association (6th ed.). American Psychological Association.
3. American Psychological Association. (2020). Publication manual of the American Psychological Association: the official guide to APA style (7th ed.). American Psychological Association.
4. Baker, R. K., Berry, P., & Thornton, B. (2008). Student attitudes on academic integrity violations. Journal of College Teaching and Learning, 5(1). https://doi.org/10.19030/tlc.v5i1.1316
5. Bealle, P. (2017). Community college academic integrity lessons that put research into practice. Theory into Practice, 56(2), 144–155. https://doi.org/10.1080/00405841.2017.1283573