Back to publications

extended · article · 2014

Measuring students' perceptions of plagiarism: modification and Rasch validation of a plagiarism attitude scale.

Steven J. Howard; John Ehrich; Russell Walton; John M. Linacre

Plagiarism is a significant area of concern in higher education, given university students' high self-reported rates of plagiarism. However, research remains inconsistent in prevalence estimates and suggested precursors of plagiarism. This may be a function of the unclear psychometric properties of the measurement tools adopted. To investigate this, we modified an existing plagiarism scale (to broaden its scope), established its psychometric properties using traditional (EFA, Cronbach's alpha) and modern (Rasch analysis) survey evaluation approaches, and examined results of well-functioning items. Results indicated that traditional and modern psychometric approaches differed in their recommendations. Further, responses indicated that although most respondents acknowledged the seriousness of plagiarism, these attitudes were neither unanimous nor consistent across the range of issues asses...

DIFCATEducationPsychologyMedicine
APA citation

Steven J. Howard, John Ehrich, Russell Walton, & John M. Linacre (2014). Measuring students' perceptions of plagiarism: modification and Rasch validation of a plagiarism attitude scale.. PubMed, 15(4), 372-93. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25232671