Academic integrity

During your time at university you will find yourself faced with many decisions - about university, your career and your personal life. Many of these decisions will provide you with opportunities to grow your knowledge and skills, however sometimes they could tempt you to compromise your integrity.


Academic misconduct

Misconduct is the term used to describe any behaviour that undermines or compromises your integrity. Learn about the different forms of academic misconduct below.

Cheating

Cheating at university can include such behaviours as:

Consider this scenario:

Aoife has been working long hours and doesn’t feel prepared for her exam even though she has spent a lot of time studying and has a good grasp of the topic. She knows she can position her phone where the online software cannot detect her looking at answers her friend, who sat the exam the day before, has sent her instead of formulating her own. Aoife is cheating on her exam by trying to pass another student’s work off as her own.

Contract cheating

The Australian Governments Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency or TEQSA defines contract cheating as:

“…when students outsource their assessments to a third party, whether that is a commercial provider, current or former student, family member or acquaintance. It includes the unauthorised use of file-sharing sites, as well as organising another person to take an examination”

(Definition from Good practice note: Addressing contract cheating to safeguard academic integrity by Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency available under a CC BY 3.0 license)

Paid contract cheating services are illegal in Australia. They include websites and individuals or groups that market or provide cheating services to students and file sharing sites.

Examples of contract cheating include:

Plagiarism

Plagiarism is when you present someone else’s ideas or work as your own. It could occur in writing, design, music, film, software code and many other situations. Some examples include:

An important part of academic writing is acknowledging the ideas and work of others. When you do this, it allows your own analysis, ideas, and voice to shine.

Consider this scenario:

Basheer finds study notes online that answer part of his assignment question. He copies the notes exactly and changes only a few words in the hopes that it won’t get detected by plagiarism software or recognised by the marker. He is intentionally trying to pass off someone else’s work as his own.

Collusion

Collusion is when two or more students act together to cheat, plagiarise or engage in academic misconduct, or encourage others to do so. Some examples include:

Be aware that leaving your work in an insecure place where other people could copy it (e.g. leaving your laptop open, forgetting to collect your printing) can lead to collusion even if you do not intend to share your work.

Consider this scenario:

Jamie is taking a subject that their sister Hannah completed last year. Jamie asks if they can look at Hannah’s assignment because they aren’t sure how to answer the question. Hannah sends Jamie her completed assignment. Even though Jamie promises not to copy it, they are obtaining an unfair advantage.

What can go wrong?

If you don’t act with academic integrity, you are likely to face penalties which can include:

Give yourself the best chance

The best way to avoid cheating is to be honest with yourself and do the work. Manage your time and be prepared.

Read widely on your topic and collect the information for your assessment yourself.