Academic Advisors as Valuable Partners for Supporting Academic Integrity

Authors

  • Shehna Javeed University of Toronto

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11575/cpai.v1i1.52759

Keywords:

academic integrity, campus collaboration, academic advising, proactive integrity education

Abstract

Academic Integrity is a fundamental value in higher education. Due to the increased ease of access to all types of information through social media and the internet, the lines have become blurred on what is can be “borrowed” and used. Recent proliferation of contract cheating has only reinforced that integrity cannot be just the responsibility of the Dean’s Office or the Academic Integrity offices. Advisors and learning strategists who see students regularly, can ubiquitously play a valuable role in integrating academic honesty into their conversations and workshops. This can be achieved in collaborations with campus partners on campus wide programming, starting early with integrating the conversation about honesty in academic orientations for new students and parents, and when having difficult conversations about study success and academic decision-making.

Author Biography

Shehna Javeed, University of Toronto

Shehna Javeed is an academic adminstrator and a student development professional at the University of Toronto. She has worked in a number of roles working with students and faculty in a variety of roles spanning two campuses. She is passionate about education and new ideas that prepare students for academic success and the world of work. She is a campus partner in a unique project on Academic Integrity and recently advancing professional ethics discussion in the classroom.

References

Academic integrity matters tip sheet (August 2012, August). University of Toronto Scarborough Academic Integrity Partners. Retrieved from

http://joomla.utsc.utoronto.ca/aaccweb/images/stories/AcademicTipsheet/AcademicIntegrityMatters.pdf

Blicq, A. (September 2013). Faking the grade. Canadian Broadcast Corporation. Retrieved from http://www.cbc.ca/doczone/episodes/faking-the-grade

Brown, D. (October 2012). TDSB's Chris Spence: The role model who failed. The Toronto Star. Retrieved from

http://www.thestar.com/opinion/editorialopinion/2013/01/17/tdsbs_chris_spence_the_role_model_who_failed.html

Carmichael, M. (August 2012). Harvard investigates 125 students for cheating on the final exam. The Boston Globe. Retrieved from http://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2012/08/30/harvard-investigates-students-for-cheating-final-exam/RIb6915NqHQ73nQQxoZOpO/story.html

Davis, S.F., Drinan, P.F., and Gallant, T.B. (2009). Cheating in Schools; What we know and what we can do. Wiley-Blackwell.

NACADA: The Global Community for Academic Advising permission Javeed, S. (2014, March). Academic advisors as valuable partners for supporting academic integrity. Academic Advising Today, 37(1)

http://www.nacada.ksu.edu/Resources/Academic-Advising-Today/View-Articles/Academic-Advisors-as-Valuable-Partners-for-Supporting-Academic-Integrity.aspx

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Published

2018-05-11

How to Cite

Javeed, S. (2018). Academic Advisors as Valuable Partners for Supporting Academic Integrity. Canadian Perspectives on Academic Integrity, 1(1), 22–26. https://doi.org/10.11575/cpai.v1i1.52759

Issue

Section

Practitioner Articles