Proactive not punitive: Approaching academic integrity from an educational perspective

Authors

  • Ann Liang University of Saskatchewan
  • Tasha Maddison Saskatchewan Polytechnic

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11575/cpai.v4i1.72824

Keywords:

academic integrity, Canada, higher education

Abstract

Our implementation of Turnitin Similarity Software at Saskatchewan Polytechnic strengthened the overall support services for both faculty and students in preventing plagiarism. Using a holistic approach we drew on the collective intelligence of experts from several departments, which resulted in training sessions, curriculum design support and intensive student support. Our research used a variety of methods such as a literature review, quantitative data from user surveys, results from the similarity software and qualitative data from focus groups that center on perceptions of the issue within the program and the perceived benefits of the software. Highlights include the use of Turnitin as a writing improvement tool for students, shifting the mindset of faculty from being punitive to being proactive, writing clear and consistent assignment instructions, embedding student supports, mandatory student and faculty training in Turnitin, academic integrity education, as well as protecting student rights and intellectual freedom.

References

-

Published

2021-06-25

How to Cite

Liang, A., & Maddison, T. . (2021). Proactive not punitive: Approaching academic integrity from an educational perspective. Canadian Perspectives on Academic Integrity, 4(1), 134. https://doi.org/10.11575/cpai.v4i1.72824

Issue

Section

Academic Integrity Inter-Institutional Meeting