Figures
from 129 UK universities showed 362 students were dismissed for cheating
|
Nearly 50,000 university
students have been caught cheating in the last three years, according to new
figures. Students
from outside the EU were four times more likely to cheat in exams and
coursework essays, freedom of information data obtained by the Times found.
Press Association report continues:
The
figures, from 129 UK universities, revealed 362 students were dismissed because
of cheating - making up 1% of those found guilty of misconduct.
Eleven
institutions each caught 1,000 or more students cheating over the three-year
period, with Kent University finding the most guilty at 1,947.
Five
students were even caught arranging for someone else to sit their exams.
Foreign
non-EU students made up 35% of all cases but accounted for just 12% of the
student population, requests from 70 universities showed.
At
Queen Mary University of London, some 75% of postgraduates found plagiarizing
were from abroad, including a third from China.
One
university professor said he believed the use of professional essay writers,
widely available on the internet, was on the rise.
Professor
Geoffrey Alderman of the University of Buckingham told the paper: "What
I'd call type-1 plagiarism, copying and pasting, is on the wane because it's so
easy to detect.
"But
my impression is that type-2 cheating, using a bespoke essay-writing service,
is increasing."
Such
services can charge hundreds of pounds for essays, dissertations and model exam
answers written by professional lecturers up to doctorate level.
The
top five universities which caught the highest number of cheats are as follows:
::
Kent 1,947
::
Westminster 1,933
::
East London 1,828
::
Sheffield Hallam 1,740
::
Oxford Brookes 1,711
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