Evaluation of an intervention to help students avoid unintentional plagiarism by improving their authorial identity

被引:80
作者
Elander, James [1 ]
Pittam, Gail [3 ]
Lusher, Joanne [4 ]
Fox, Pauline [5 ]
Payne, Nicola [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Derby, Ctr Psychol Res, Derby DE22 1GB, England
[2] Middlesex Univ, Dept Psychol, Hlth Psychol Programme, London N17 8HR, England
[3] Anglia Ruskin Univ, Fac Hlth & Social Care, Cambridge, England
[4] London Metropolitan Univ, Fac Life Sci, Sch Psychol, London, England
[5] Thames Valley Univ, Dept Psychol, London, England
关键词
authorship; authorial identity; plagiarism; academic literacy; writing; COLLEGE; INVENTORY;
D O I
10.1080/02602930802687745
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Students with poorly developed authorial identity may be at risk of unintentional plagiarism. An instructional intervention designed specifically to improve authorial identity was delivered to 364 psychology students at three post-1992 universities in London, UK, and evaluated with before-and-after measures of beliefs and attitudes about academic authorship, using the Student Authorship Questionnaire. Changes in questionnaire scores showed that the intervention led to significantly increased confidence in writing, understanding of authorship, knowledge to avoid plagiarism, and top-down approaches to writing, and significantly decreased bottom-up and pragmatic approaches to writing. For understanding of authorship, knowledge to avoid plagiarism and pragmatic approaches to writing, significant intervention by year of study interaction effects showed that the greatest improvements were among year one undergraduates. Direct evaluative feedback showed that 86% of students believed the intervention helped them avoid plagiarism and 66% believed it helped them write better assignments. Post-intervention focus groups revealed changed student understandings about authorial identity and academic writing. The results show that interventions can help students avoid unintentional plagiarism by adopting more authorial roles in their academic writing. Further research could explore other influences on authorial identity, and examine the impact of authorial identity interventions on other outcome indicators.
引用
收藏
页码:157 / 171
页数:15
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