ProudKangaroo wrote on Sep 13
th, 2024 at 12:08pm:
quote author=Frank link=1726146015/6#6 date=1726191577]
I actually worked in universities in senior positions for decades. I speak from first hand experience.
It is profoundly disheartening, considering your tenure in academia, to witness such a glaring lack of intellectual integrity.
Despite decades of experience in a senior academic role, it appears that intellectual dishonesty remains prevalent.
What could have transpired to lead to this?
Unless you weren't a part of their academic departments and in a more behind the scenes faculty role. But even so, by proximity, I would have expected more.
Although my own academic journey was limited to a Master’s and a Bachelor’s, which sufficed for my purposes, we were nevertheless instilled with the importance of critical analysis and the discernment of fact from fallacy, particularly within the sciences.
While I hold great respect and even a degree of envy for those who, having left school after Year 10 for a trade, are able to acquire their first home by the age of 25, at least within my circle of friends, those who chose that path lack the nuanced reasoning skills. This has been highlighted by their engagement with dubious content, such as the misinformation about square blood cells and other COVID related BS on Facebook.
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Student visa holders are responsible for the large majority of costly student misconduct cases driven by creative cheating methods such as artificial intelligence, with one university investigating 10 times the number of international students than domestic students.
There are now claims Labor’s international student caps could push quality foreign students away from Australian universities to other countries, exacerbating the problem.
At the University of Sydney, 999 of 1259 cases (close to 80 per cent) of student misconduct received by the Student Affairs Unit in 2023 identified student visa holders as respondents. That’s more than 10 times the number of cases for domestic students.
Most of these cases were related to academic misconduct, including online exam cheating detected through a proctoring service, and contract cheating due to the growth in AI cases, with the rest related to discrimination, bullying and harassment, according to Sydney University’s 2023 Annual Report of Student Misconduct.
Separate 2023
academic integrity data released by the university revealed almost 100 per cent of exam misconduct referrals to the Student Affairs Unit involved international students – with 616 relating to undergraduate students and 265 to postgraduate students.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/80-per-cent-of-students-misconduct-invol...