Academic Integrity vs Academic Dishonesty
Academic integrity is the value of being honest, ethical, and thorough in your academic work. It allows readers to trust that you aren’t misrepresenting your findings or taking credit for the work of others.
Academic dishonesty (or academic misconduct) refers to actions that undermine academic integrity. It typically refers to some form of plagiarism, ranging from serious offences like purchasing a pre-written essay to milder ones like accidental citation errors – most of which are easy to detect with a plagiarism checker.
These concepts are also essential in the world of professional academic research and publishing. In this context, accusations of misconduct can have serious legal and reputational consequences.
Types of academic dishonesty
While plagiarism is the main offence you’ll hear about, academic dishonesty comes in many forms that vary extensively in severity, from faking an illness to buying an essay.
Type | Definition | Example |
---|---|---|
Plagiarism | Copying someone else’s work and passing it off as your own, without giving proper credit | Copying and pasting parts of a source you found online without citing it |
Cheating | Using unauthorised sources or devices to help you achieve an outcome you wouldn’t have on your own | Copying someone’s answers on an exam |
Contract cheating | Paying or bribing someone to help you cheat | Buying exam answers, pre-written essays, or admittance to a university |
Facilitation of academic dishonesty | Helping others cheat | Giving a friend exam answers or taking an exam in their place |
Collusion | Working together with others to cheat | Texting your friends during an online exam to compare answers |
Data fabrication | Misrepresenting the results of your research | Modifying experimental data to show a nonexistent correlation that would support your hypothesis |
Deceit | Lying or falsifying information | Fabricating an illness to get out of an exam |
Why does academic integrity matter?
Most students are clear that academic integrity is important, but dishonesty is still common.
There are various reasons you might be tempted to resort to academic dishonesty: pressure to achieve, time management struggles, or difficulty with a course. But academic dishonesty hurts you, your peers, and the learning process. It’s:
- Unfair to the plagiarised author
- Unfair to other students who did not cheat
- Damaging to your own learning
- Harmful if published research contains misleading information
- Dangerous if you don’t properly learn the fundamentals in some contexts (e.g., lab work)
The consequences depend on the severity of the offence and your institution’s policies. They can range from a warning for a first offence to a failing grade in a course to expulsion from your university.
Examples of academic dishonesty
- Faking illness to skip a class
- Asking for a classmate’s notes from a special review session held by your professor that you did not attend
- Crowdsourcing or collaborating with others on a homework assignment
- Citing a source you didn’t actually read in a paper
- Cheating on a test
- Peeking at your notes on a take-home exam that was supposed to be closed-book
- Resubmitting a paper that you had already submitted for a different course (self-plagiarism)
- Forging a doctor’s note to get an extension on an assignment
- Fabricating experimental results or data to prove your hypothesis in a lab environment
- Buying a pre-written essay online or answers to a test
- Falsifying a family emergency to get out of taking a final exam
- Taking a test for a friend
Frequently asked questions about plagiarism
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George, T. & Caulfield, J. (2025, February 27). Academic Integrity vs Academic Dishonesty. Scribbr. Retrieved 10 March 2025, from https://www.scribbr.co.uk/preventing-plagiarism/academic-integrity/