REVISTA DE LA UNIVERSIDAD DEL ZULIA. 3ª época. Año 12 N° 35, 2021
Galina Epanchintseva et al. /// Academic student fraud in longitudinal research design, 322-340
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.46925//rdluz.35.19
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2002; Grijalva, Nowell, Kerkvliet, 2006; Harding, Carpenter, Finelli, 2012). We will focus on
a brief analysis of well-known psychological studies that focus on academic fraud in the
student environment. First of all, we will note the research that describes the frequency of
this phenomenon. Such studies include Bunn D., Caudill S.,Gropper D. (Bunn, Caudill,
Gropper, 1992); Graham M., Monday J., (Graham et al., 1994); Grimes P. ( Grimes, 2004);
Brandao, Teixeira (Brandao, Teixeira, 2005); McCabe, Trevino (McCabe, Feghali, Abdallah,
2008); Adebayo (Adebayo, 2010); Jones (Jones, 2011), Giluk T.( Giluk, Postlethwaite, 2015).
Empirical evidence from these studies has revealed threats to the quality of modern
education, in which students are increasingly resorting to academic fraud. The main factor
of academic dishonest behavior Grimes P., (Grimes, 2004), Stone, Jawahar, Kisamore (Stone,
Jawahar, Kisamore, 2010); the conformity factor was named. This conclusion was confirmed
by the data of subsequent studies by Harding T., Carpenter D., Finelli C. (Harding,
Carpenter, Finelli, 2012). Grijalva, Kerkvliet, Nowell (Grijalva, Nowell, Kerkvliet, 2006) have
identified unintended fraud (panic cheating), which, in all likelihood, is quite common than
planned. The cross-cultural research conducted by J. Magnus, V. Polterovich, D. Danilov, and
A. Kolesnikov turned out to be somewhat undeservedly unnoticed. Savvateev (Grimes,
2004), ("Tolerance of Cheating: An Analysis across Countries"), Lupton, Chapman (Hard,
Conway, Moran, 2006), Radaeva, Chirikova, (Chirikov, Shmeleva, Loyalka, 2019).
Cross-cultural studies, so rare for our science, have revealed the peculiarities of the
attitude of students to students who use cheating; the peculiarities of the attitude to students
who support cheating, the peculiarities of the attitude to students who talk about cheating
to teachers (Hensley, Kirkpatrick, Burgoon, 2013). Russian students turned out to be more
tolerant than American and European students towards cheating by other students, but
absolutely intolerant of reporting cheating by other students to teachers (Eremeva, 2018).
Researchers Dremova O., Shmeleva E., Moloshonok N., Terentyev E. we found that
academic fraud is quite popular among Russian students: two-thirds of students admitted
that they have ever cheated, and their fellow students resort to academic fraud in 94-95%.
Efimova G. Z. and Kicherova M. N. when analyzing the causes of academic fraud, they point
to the lack of motivation for original works and applied research among students, which
leads to plagiarism, falsification and other forms of academic fraud (Chirikov, Shmeleva,
Loyalka, 2019). Dremova O., Shmeleva E. in their study of the psychological and pedagogical