Abstract:
Academic dishonesty, academic misconduct or
academic fraud is any type of cheating that occurs in relation to
formal academic exercises. This study primarily focused on
cheating of examination in the classrooms through application of
different techniques, mostly disguised ones. Qualitative research
activity, employing interview and classroom observations as its
basic tools of data gatherings were used on sources of the study.
Two secondary schools (Jiren and Jimma Secondary schools)
were study sites involved in the exploit where purposefully
selected students of grade nine and ten with their classroom
teachers chosen as resourceful informants. Finding of this study
clearly indicated that cheating is common problem of all schools
where it became more comprehensive and intricate. Most of the
respondents clearly indicated that side copying of examination
results, tossing of written answers of the exam, collaboration and
mischief with invigilators, enforcing invigilators to cooperate,
exchanging of answer sheets willingly or forcefully from active
ones, mobile transfer or text and use of sitting arrangements for
cheating as major ones. It was underlined that cheating was
found as major challenge of the town and the country which is
now uncontrollable at secondary school level. Consequently,
cheating is envisaged as major mechanism of receiving excellent
grade points without any effort and difficulty. Collaborative
effort of education offices, judiciary, schools and parents to
minimize or curb the problem is recommended where all
stakeholders of the government and public affairs work together
by advising, guiding and teaching the new generation about
badness of cheating, its ethical and moral failure to pass on
development of self confidence and self assertions.
Index Terms- Academic dishonesty, cheating, examination,
practices, outcome
I. INTRODUCTION
ackground: Cheating in high schools is growing globally in
an alarming and at an exponential rate. There is also a great
difference in students' perceptions and the realty of their own
ethical behavior which may nowadays highly obscured within
their personality development. In USA, a survey was done in
2008 on 30,000 students in high school which was carried out by
the Josephson Institute for Youth Ethics, where 62 percent of
students polled said that they "copied another's homework two or
more times in the past years” (EAY, 2008). Yet, on the same
survey, 92 percent said they were "satisfied with their personal
ethics and character" (Ibid). Hence, there is generally a
discrepancy between actual behavior and self-image of
secondary school students' character that is internalized and in
use through education system starting from K-1 level.
Consequently, different studies done in various countries
revealed that there are a number of techniques, mechanisms and
ways of cheating examinations to secure pass marks, better grade
points or pass national examinations. A study done in the US
indicated that online services that offer to prepare any kind of
homework of high school and college level and take online tests
for students were cheated (Fall, 2009). While administrators are
often aware of such websites, they have been unsuccessful in
curbing cheating in homework and non-proctored online tests,
resorting to a recommendation by the Ohio Mathematics
Association to derive at least 80% of the grade of online classes
from proctored tests (Fall, 2009). While research on academic
dishonesty in other countries is less extensive, anecdotal
evidence suggests cheating could be even more common in all
the countries of the globe. Hence, Ethiopia is one of the countries
under jeopardy of examination cheating at all levels of education
system where online transfer through mobile texts, bribery of the
school administration and/or education offices to secure
examinations and direct copy employing different cheating
techniques in a classroom (disguised or forceful) are the common
ones with not worth mentioning research undertakings on the
issue.