Assessing Male vs. Female Business Student Perceptions of Plagiarism at a Southern Institution of Higher Education

  • Doss D
  • Henley R
  • Becker U
  • et al.
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Abstract

Plagiarism, cheating, and academic dishonesty affect institutions of higher education. This study examines student perceptions of plagiarism within a Southern, Division-II teaching institution. This study employed a five-point Likert-scale to examine differences of perceptions between male versus female business students. Two statistically significant outcomes were observed between males and females involving the notions that plagiarism is perceived as a necessary evil and that plagiarism is illegal. Respectively, the analyses of the means showed that both male and female respondents tended toward disagreement concerning whether plagiarism is a necessary evil and neutrality regarding whether plagiarism is illegal. Keywords:

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Doss, D. A., Henley, R., Becker, U., McElreath, D., Lackey, H., Jones, D., … Lin, S. (2016). Assessing Male vs. Female Business Student Perceptions of Plagiarism at a Southern Institution of Higher Education. Georgia Educational Researcher, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.20429/ger.2016.130101

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