Academic integrity of university students during emergency remote online assessment : an exploration of student voices
Abstract
Background: This article examines the phenomenon of academic integrity during the
coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, with particular reference to emergency
online assessments in 2020.
Aim: It explores academic dishonesty, cheating and plagiarism of university students during
emergency remote online assessment, from the perspective of South African students.
Setting and Methodology: The authors explore the approaches of different universities
worldwide, as well as the extant literature on the topic. An examination of the current literature
related explicitly to the COVID-19 online assessments reveals a dearth of engagement by
researchers in the South African context. In order to address this lacuna, the authors rely on
data generated from an institutional forum on academic dishonesty at a University in South
Africa. It focuses specifically on the voices of students presented during the forum, which
explained both why students are dishonest and ways to curb dishonesty.
Results and Conclusion: The data generated show whilst some students were dishonest due
to pandemic-related issues (like lack of monitoring), there are also other reasons, such as lack
of time management, feeling overwhelmed and stressed and struggling with technology that
contributes to student dishonesty. Students suggest that assessments be approached differently
online to curb academic dishonesty. The paper concludes by providing some fundamental
changes needed to address academic dishonesty.