Motivational Perspectives On Student Cheating: Toward An Integrated Model of Academic Dishonesty
Motivational Perspectives On Student Cheating: Toward An Integrated Model of Academic Dishonesty
Motivational Perspectives On Student Cheating: Toward An Integrated Model of Academic Dishonesty
Eric M. Anderman
Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology
University of Kentucky
This article uses theoretical concepts from self-efficacy theory, goal theory, expectancy value,
and intrinsic motivation theory as a way to organize the vast and largely atheoretical literature
on academic cheating. Specifically, it draws on 3 particular questions that students encounter
when deciding whether to cheat: (a) What is my purpose?, (b) Can I do this task?, and (c) What
are the costs associated with cheating? This article reviews both experimental and
nonexperimental evidence related to each of these questions and offers suggestions for future
research and instructional practices that will lessen the likelihood of cheating.
Correspondence should be addressed to Tamera B. Murdock, Department of Psychology, University of MissouriKansas City, Kansas City,
MO 641102499. E-mail: murdocktb@umkc.edu
extent, these studies examine personal characteristics associated with dishonesty, including demographic variables such as
gender and prior achievement, as well as personality and motivational factors, including self-efficacy, goal orientation, and
moral development. A second body of studies focuses on contextual factors associated with cheating, such as the difficulty
of students course loads or the level of instructor proctoring.
Whereas a minority of these studies are grounded in motivation, moral development, or social deviance theories, most are
atheoretical. Moreover, there have been few efforts to interpret
these findings within an overarching conceptual framework
(see Whitley, 1998), making it difficult to build to a systematic,
progressive body of scholarship.
We propose a framework for organizing this vast literature,
using concepts and research from achievement motivation.
Specifically, we seek to show how many of the seemingly disparate factors that predict cheating influence dishonest behavior via three motivational mechanisms: (a) studentsgoals, (b)
students expectations for accomplishing those goals, and (c)
students assessments of the costs associated with achieving
those goals. We demonstrate that students are more likely to
cheat when they answer the question What do I hope to accomplish? with goals that are performance, ego, or extrinsically focused versus mastery, learning, or intrinsically focused). Second, cheating rates are higher when students have
poor expectations of their abilities to accomplish their goals
through personal effort (Can I do this?). Finally, when stu-
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dents assess that the potential costs incurred from cheating are
minimal, they are more apt to engage in dishonest behaviors.
Within this framework, both individual factors and contextual
factors are presumed to influence studentsanswers to each of
these questions. For example, although a student may have
high self-efficacy for performance in mathematics, and we
would thus predict that she would not be inclined to cheat in
math classes, within a particular classroom, that student may
doubt her ability to accomplish a given goal because of poor
teaching, unclear tests, or a host of other environmental variables that are outside of her control.
Although macro level changes in the values and behaviors
of our society have undoubtedly contributed to the academic
dishonesty epidemic (Callahan, 2004), we limit our framework (see Figure 1) and our analysis of cheating to the effects
of classrooms, families and peers, or what Bronfenbrenner
(1979) refers to as microlevel influences. We delimited our
framework in this way because the majority of the cheating
literature addresses micro-level effects and, as educational
psychologists, we are particularly interested in identifying
factors that can help schools to reduce academic dishonesty.
This article is organized into four major sections. Extant
literature demonstrating how cheating is related to students
goals, judgments about their capabilities to achieve those
goals, and the perceived costs of cheating is presented in the
first three sections. We have framed each section with a guiding question that students consider in academic contexts.
Within each topic, we provide a conceptual argument for the
relations between the specific motivational concepts and
cheating and then review both the nonexperimental and experimental research supporting these relations. A critical
synthesis of the findings concludes each section. We subsequently provide a more integrated analysis of this literature
as a whole and offer suggestions to improve our understanding of academic dishonesty. This final section outlines what
we can infer about creating classroom environments that
ameliorate cheating and a brief discussion of cheating within
the larger societal context. We hope to illustrate the parallels
between the school-based factors that affect the likelihood of
cheating and the larger changes in our society that make the
promotion of academic honesty a complex task for teachers
and other school personnel (Callahan, 2004).
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Nonexperimental Evidence
Several correlational studies have directly examined self-efficacy beliefs in relation to cheating behavior. For example,
Murdock et al. (2001) reported an inverse relation between
cheating and academic self-efficacy for middle school students, even after controlling for personal goals, classroom
goal structures, and other aspects of the classroom environment. Similar relations between self-efficacy and cheating
have been reported in college samples (e.g., Finn & Frone,
2004). Other studies have linked cheating to a fear of failure
(Calabrese & Cochran, 1990; Michaels & Miethe, 1989), test
anxiety (Malinowski & Smith, 1985), and worrying about
ones performance (Anderman et al., 1998). Although fear
and worry are not direct assessments of self-efficacy, within
social-cognitive theory, arousal, which is tied to emotion, has
been shown to be one of the four sources of information that
people use in forming their self-efficacy judgments
(Bandura, 1986, 1997), with negative and anxious emotions
serving as low efficacy cues.
Actual achievement is also another cue for individuals
appraisals of their self-efficacy (Bandura, 1986, 1997). In
general, there is a positive correlation between measures of
academic achievement and self-efficacy belief, and indices
of achievement such as grade point average (GPA) have also
been inversely related to self-reported cheating (Finn &
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perceptions of the fairness of the classroom mediated the relations between pedagogical competence and judgments of
cheating acceptability, offering some evidence that cheating
may be higher in classes where teachers behaviors are perceived as reducing students outcome expectations.
Can I Do This? Summary and Questions for
Further Exploration
Similar to the research linking students goals to cheating,
there is more evidence that students individual self-efficacy
beliefs and their perceived outcome expectations are related
to cheating, and there is less evidence for the effects of the environment on cheating, via their impact of these beliefs systems. When students have high self-efficacy beliefs and expect to succeed at an academic task, cheating is probably
neither a necessary nor useful strategy. As noted by
Anderman et al. (1998), cheating is a somewhat unique behavior, different from other behaviors associated with performance avoidance. Self-handicapping and other avoidance
strategies (e.g., avoidance of help-seeking, avoidance of novelty) are means of explaining and justifying failures. In contrast, cheating is a strategy that is designed to lead to success,
albeit via antisocial and unacceptable means (Turner et al.,
2002; Urdan, Ryan, Anderman, & Gheen, 2002).
Although there are theoretical explanations for the relations between cheating and self-efficacy beliefs, two under-explored facets of education that may yield additional insights regarding the relations of self-efficacy to academic
cheating are ability grouping and differentiation of academic
tasks. Self-efficacy and expectancies for success may be
lower for students in lower-ability tracks. However, in terms
of cheating, perhaps a more serious problem emerges for students who are in high-ability classes but do not feel as efficacious as their peers. When students feel that they cannot keep
up with their more able peers, they may be more likely to resort to cheating to appear as competent as their classmates.
This is, in some ways, reminiscent of a performance-avoid
goal orientation in that students may resort to cheating if they
feel that they will be perceived as incompetent if they do not
perform as well as their peers (Elliot, 1999; Middleton &
Midgley, 1997).
Self-efficacy theorists argue that self-efficacy is highly
task specific (Bandura, 1997; Pajares, 1996). Thus a student
may report feeling highly efficacious on a writing task but
extremely inefficacious on a specific multiplication problem. In terms of cheating, the student would be more likely
to engage in cheating while completing the task for which
the student feels a sense of low self-efficacy. Nevertheless,
it is possible that low levels of self-efficacy within a particular academic domain may yield a greater long-term likelihood of the occurrence of cheating within that domain. Future studies examining the long-term effects of low levels
of task-specific self-efficacy on more generalized behaviors
should be examined.
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whom they have studied (Houston, 1986). The cost of engaging in cheating behaviors may be perceived as higher when
students are randomly assigned to seats due to the unknown
outcomes of cheating from unfamiliar classmates.
Laboratory studies also demonstrate the effects of potential detection on cheating. Students in an experimental laboratory study were less likely to cheat in a high versus low surveillance condition (Covey et al., 2001). This main effect was
modified by an interaction effect: The rates of cheating
among students who were low in self monitoring, and who
presumably care less about the opinions of others, were less
affected by the amount of surveillance than were cheating
rates of their more impression-conscious peers. Experimental studies of high school students with high and low surveillance conditions have yielded similar findings (see Corcoran
& Rotter, 1987).
Costs to Ones Self-Image:
Nonexperimental Evidence
Dishonesty is also more prevalent when a student can reduce
the potential costs of having to see him- or herself or fear that
others will see him or her as a bad person. Self-image suffers when people behave in ways that violate their own norms
of acceptable behavior; as such, one would anticipate that the
costs associated with cheating would be reduced, and thus
the prevalence of cheating would be higher, among students
who see cheating as acceptable. Indeed, a qualitative study of
college students in Canada describes the numerous impression management strategies that some students use to ensure
that they are not perceived by others as cheaters, such as staring at the ceiling while thinking, dressing without pockets,
and making facial expressions that convey serious involvement with the exam materials (Albas & Albas, 1996).
Students judgments of the acceptability of cheating have
been conceptualized in two ways, including: moral beliefs
about cheating and attitudes about the justifiability of cheating, which is often referred to as neutralizing attitudes. As
we show below, evidence suggests that students who engage
in cheating behaviors typically view cheating as more justifiable and acceptable than those who are more honest, thereby
lessening the impact of the behavior on ones self-perceptions (i.e., reduced cost of cheating). At the same time, it is
not clear that honest and dishonest students actually differ in
their moral judgments of cheating. We turn first to the literature on morality and cheating, followed by the scholarship on
neutralizing attitudes.
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Morality. In contrast to the consistent correlations between moral reasoning and self-reported cheating, experimental studies that use actual cheating behavior as the dependent variable have been less conclusive. For example, in
one study, moral reasoning was examined in relation to actual
cheating behavior among students attending religious and secular high schools (Bruggeman & Hart, 1996). After completing a moral reasoning test, students were asked to memorize
the location of 10 circles of various sizes on a sheet of paper
and then to reproduce the drawing with their eyes closed. Extra
credit points were offered for high performance on the reproduction tasks. Students were coded as cheaters if they scored
more than three standard deviations above the mean score for
blinded performance, established prior to the study, or if after the test, they admitted to having cheated. Cheating was
equally frequent among students attending secular (79%) and
religious (70%) high schools, and dishonesty was unrelated to
level of moral reasoning in either sample.
Corcoran and Rotter (1987) examined moral correlates of
cheating under high and low surveillance conditions. Undergraduate women completed an assessment of their stated degree of morality and their level of self-punishment after violating their own moral standards. Subsequently, participants
completed five mazes with their eyes closed after studying
them for a few minutes. Half of the participants completed
the task while the experimenter watched (high surveillance),
whereas the other half were left alone (low surveillance).
Among all students cheating was less frequent when someone monitored the students behavior. Across both surveillance conditions there was not a significant correlation between students self-punishment scores and their level of
cheating. However, cheating was inversely related to students morality scores but only in the high surveillance condition, suggesting that morality may only matter when there
is some public threat of being exposed.
In contrast to these findings, undergraduate male students
at lower versus higher levels of moral reasoning were found
to cheat more frequently and more quickly on a laboratory
task. Participants completed 10 trials of a tracking task requiring them to trace a moving triangular figure with a stylus
light. They recorded their own time on the task, which was
also recorded by a clock in another room. Students were left
alone to complete the task and were given falsely inflated
normative information about the results obtained from others
on this task. Unlike the Corcoran and Rotter (1987) study, no
tangible incentives were given for task performance, and no
high surveillance condition was included, which may account for the differential findings between the two studies.
The presence of a morality effect in this study but not in the
Bruggeman and Hart (1996) study also may be due to the age
differences of the participants: High school students probably do not attain the levels of moral reasoning that were asso-
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Improved testing of classroom effects. As this review has demonstrated, much of the research on academic
cheating relies on one-time correlational studies, where studentsself-reported cheating is associated with personality attributes or students perceptions of the classroom context. As
such, there is much stronger support for the relations between
individual variables and cheating than there is for the role of
contextual variables. Students who hold performance goals or
who are extrinsically motivated, who doubt their self-efficacy,
and who hold beliefs that reduce the costs associated with dishonesty are more likely to cheat as compared to their peers.
However, the role of classroom, peer, and family variables in
creating and sustaining those beliefs is more equivocal. We
know that students who cheat perceive these environments differently from those who do not cheat, but we have little evidence suggesting that rates of cheating vary across classrooms
in ways that be explained by characteristics of that classroom.
Although experimental studies in laboratory situations
(Sherrill, Salisbury, Horowitz, & Friedman, 1971) or with hypothetical vignettes (Murdock, Miller, & Goetzinger, 2005;
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Question #2: Can I do this? Students self-perceptions of ability also are related to academic cheating. One instructional implication is that educators should work to build
students self-efficacy beliefs. Whereas there is much research indicating that self-efficacy is an extremely important
motivational variable (see Bandura, 1997), self-efficacy often is not considered during instructional planning by teachers and college instructors.
One proven means of improving students self-efficacy beliefs is to help students set proximal goals (Schunk, 1990).
When students focus on short-term attainable goals rather than
longer-term distal goals, they are more likely to feel a sense of
satisfaction and to experience task-mastery, which in turn helps
to build their personal self-efficacy beliefs toward a task. When
students are confronted with difficult tasks and focus on distal
goals, they may be more likely to experience anxiety and ultimately to view cheating as a viable means for achieving success. However, if a student sets short-term goals and experiences success at those goals, the students efficacy beliefs will
be enhanced, and the likelihood of cheating may be diminished.
Question #3: What are the costs? The final question
that we examined concerned the costs facing students when
they choose to cheat. Various types of costs are associated with
cheating, including the possibility of being caught and the impact to ones self-image. One instructional implication is that
educators should make the costs of cheating obvious, important, and serious. When students know that punishments for
cheating are severe, they are less likely to cheat (Graham et al.,
1994). An obvious question to be addressed in future research
is whether stricter penalties for engagement in cheating behaviors will lead some students to choose more sophisticated and
technologically savvy methods of cheating.
The literature clearly suggests that when students can shift
the blame away from themselves, cheating is more likely to occur. As such, good instructional practices are a key to reducing
cheating. Clear learning objectives and fair assessment procedures reduce the likelihood that students will see the teacher as
creating conditions where cheating can be rationalized.
It also is possible to make students think about the potential costs to their self-concepts if they engage in cheating by
making public expectations for honesty and violations of the
policy. This tactic is not used often in classrooms, but it certainly could be, particularly in middle and high school classrooms. School counselors or school psychologists might play
a role in this area (Gilman & Anderman, in press). Indeed,
school psychologists or counselors could work directly with
teachers and students to help students to understand how the
act of cheating in the present might remain a salient problem
for them in their future.
CONCLUSION
Many of the individual and contextual factors that are related
to cheating can be subsumed under a motivational framework
whereby students decisions to cheat or not cheat can be understood as coming from their answers to three motivational
questions: What is my goal?, Can I do this?, and What
are the costs? Framing dishonesty in this manner has implications not only for teaching practices, but also for theories
of motivation. Students may respond to low self-efficacy or
high needs for achievement by being dishonest, rather than
simply by increasing or decreasing effort, changing their
learning strategies, or self-handicapping. Thus, future motivation research should more regularly recognize cheating as
a potential method for achieving ones classroom goals. Accomplishing this objective may push motivational researchers to expand their theories to include both moral development and decision-making components.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Partial support for this project was provided by a faculty
research grant from the University of Missouri Research
Board awarded to Tamera B. Murdock.
Thanks to Amy Goetzinger, Trisha James, Angela Miller,
and two anonymous reviewers for comments on previous
versions of this article.
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