Why do postgraduate students commit plagiarism? An empirical study

Abstract The study investigated postgraduate students’ knowledge of plagiarism, forms of plagiarism they commit, the reasons they commit plagiarism and actions taken against postgraduate students who plagiarise at Mzuzu University in Malawi. The study adopted a mixed methods approach. The quantitati...

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Main Authors: Apatsa Selemani, Winner Dominic Chawinga, Gift Dube
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-09-01
Series:International Journal for Educational Integrity
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40979-018-0029-6
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spelling doaj-000fb297d9a64e4b90696e3e4630d8582020-11-25T02:32:17ZengBMCInternational Journal for Educational Integrity1833-25952018-09-0114111510.1007/s40979-018-0029-6Why do postgraduate students commit plagiarism? An empirical studyApatsa Selemani0Winner Dominic Chawinga1Gift Dube2College of Medicine Library, University of MalawiDepartment of Library and Information Science, Mzuzu UniversityMzuzu University Library and Learning Resource CenterAbstract The study investigated postgraduate students’ knowledge of plagiarism, forms of plagiarism they commit, the reasons they commit plagiarism and actions taken against postgraduate students who plagiarise at Mzuzu University in Malawi. The study adopted a mixed methods approach. The quantitative data were collected by distributing questionnaires to postgraduate students and academic staff whereas qualitative data were collected by conducting follow-up interviews with some academics, an assistant registrar and assistant librarian. The study found that despite students reporting that they had a conceptual understanding of plagiarism, the majority of them reported that they had intentionally and unintentionally committed plagiarism, mainly due to pressure for good grades (86.7%), laziness and poor time management (84.9%), and lack of good academic writing skills (84.9%). The study also established that prevalent forms of plagiarism admitted (by students) and reported (by academic staff) to have been committed included lack of proper acknowledgement after paraphrasing (69.8%), summarising (64.1%) and using quotation marks (56.6%). The study further found that the common sanctions applied by academics include giving a warning and asking the student to re-write the plagiarised work. The study recommends that Mzuzu University should carry out awareness campaigns about the negative effects of plagiarism, targeting postgraduate students; and should introduce advanced academic writing skills training for postgraduate students.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40979-018-0029-6MalawiPostgraduate studentsPrevalence of plagiarismReasons for plagiarisingSanctions against plagiarism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Apatsa Selemani
Winner Dominic Chawinga
Gift Dube
spellingShingle Apatsa Selemani
Winner Dominic Chawinga
Gift Dube
Why do postgraduate students commit plagiarism? An empirical study
International Journal for Educational Integrity
Malawi
Postgraduate students
Prevalence of plagiarism
Reasons for plagiarising
Sanctions against plagiarism
author_facet Apatsa Selemani
Winner Dominic Chawinga
Gift Dube
author_sort Apatsa Selemani
title Why do postgraduate students commit plagiarism? An empirical study
title_short Why do postgraduate students commit plagiarism? An empirical study
title_full Why do postgraduate students commit plagiarism? An empirical study
title_fullStr Why do postgraduate students commit plagiarism? An empirical study
title_full_unstemmed Why do postgraduate students commit plagiarism? An empirical study
title_sort why do postgraduate students commit plagiarism? an empirical study
publisher BMC
series International Journal for Educational Integrity
issn 1833-2595
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Abstract The study investigated postgraduate students’ knowledge of plagiarism, forms of plagiarism they commit, the reasons they commit plagiarism and actions taken against postgraduate students who plagiarise at Mzuzu University in Malawi. The study adopted a mixed methods approach. The quantitative data were collected by distributing questionnaires to postgraduate students and academic staff whereas qualitative data were collected by conducting follow-up interviews with some academics, an assistant registrar and assistant librarian. The study found that despite students reporting that they had a conceptual understanding of plagiarism, the majority of them reported that they had intentionally and unintentionally committed plagiarism, mainly due to pressure for good grades (86.7%), laziness and poor time management (84.9%), and lack of good academic writing skills (84.9%). The study also established that prevalent forms of plagiarism admitted (by students) and reported (by academic staff) to have been committed included lack of proper acknowledgement after paraphrasing (69.8%), summarising (64.1%) and using quotation marks (56.6%). The study further found that the common sanctions applied by academics include giving a warning and asking the student to re-write the plagiarised work. The study recommends that Mzuzu University should carry out awareness campaigns about the negative effects of plagiarism, targeting postgraduate students; and should introduce advanced academic writing skills training for postgraduate students.
topic Malawi
Postgraduate students
Prevalence of plagiarism
Reasons for plagiarising
Sanctions against plagiarism
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40979-018-0029-6
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