After
analyzing five values (honesty; fairness; trust; respect; and responsibility)
that are constitutive of academic integrity, this paper considers moral
challenges to academic integrity that are posed by the World Wide Web in three
areas: student integrity, faculty integrity, and institutional integrity.
Introduction
The
advent of the World Wide Web has brought a number of challenges to the academic
community not the least of which is a wide array of issues that fall under the
heading of academic integrity. In the following remarks, I will sketch out a
range of such issues and discuss some of the ethical questions that they raise.
In so doing, I hope to bring together two disparate academic discussions, one
of which has been concerned with computer ethics and the other of which has
been devoted to academic integrity. The two discussions intersect in the area
where the Internet, and especially the World Wide Web, meets the
university.
Understanding Academic Integrity
When I first became involved in working on the
statement that has just recently been published by the Centre for Academic
Integrity as the "Fundamental Values of Academic Integrity/ I thought
about academic integrity exclusively as a matter of honesty. Academic
integrity, I thought, could be reduced to a simple injunction, "Students,
don't cheat!" I was interested to discover a different approach to
academic integrity, one that was much broader than I original by assumed.
Academic integrity the draft of this document suggested, encompassed five
values: respect, trust, honesty, fairness, and responsibility. [See http://
www.academicintegrity.org/values.asp ] As I helped to develop this document
through its next draft, I became intrigued by the vision of academic integrity
it proposed. Several distinctive characteristics of its approach were
noteworthy. First, this document is basically concerned with the integrity of
the academic life, and it is this to which the phrase "academic
integrity" refers. This sets aside the negative and narrow conception of
academic integrity as "don't cheat" and replaces it with a conception
that is both positive and much broader. Second, this document does not focus
exclusively on students. It recognizes that issues of the integrity of the
academic life encompass three main parties: students, faculty, and
administrators. (It is also noted that other parties, such as legislatures and
boards of trustees, play a role in this process.) It also recognizes that the
academic life encompasses several principal activities--learning, teaching, and
researching--and that to engage in these activities we often must participate
in a community. This is a departure from conceptions of academic integrity that
see it as applicable only to the activity of learning engaged in by students.
Third, this approach derives its five values by asking the following question:
what values must be present if the academic life is to flourish? This approach,
incidentally, has the structure of a transcendental argument, which attempts to
determine the necessary conditions of the possibility of x, where x in this
case equals "the process of education" or "a flourishing
academic life." [Stroud, 1968] In this case, the argument involves looking
at the necessary moral conditions of the possibility of a flourishing academic
life, and the answer to that question is the set of five fundamental values.
Honesty
Without
honesty, neither students nor teachers could trust what they hear from one
another. For the process of education to work, both students and teachers have
to be honest. Students not only have to refrain from cheating and plagiarizing,
but they also have to be willing to be honest about their own beliefs and
values. Unless they are willing to be honest in this way, those beliefs and
values will remain insulated and untouched by the academic dialogue. Just as
students must be honest, so too must faculty members be honest as well. In
teaching about Kant and universalizability, I often sketch out the following
situation for students. Imagine that you have cheat throughout a course and
done so successfully. Your final course average is 98%, and your professor has
not inkling that you cheated. You receive your grades in the mail and are
dismayed to see that you received a "D" in the course. Storming into
the professor's office, you say there must be some mistake. He says, "No,
there's no mistake--I just lied to the Registrar about what grade you
deserved." The student's response, of course, would be, "You can't do
that--you can't lie about my grade." Even cheating presupposes a context
of fairness and honesty as the condition of its possibility.
Trust
Without
trust, the dialogue that is at the heart of the academic life withers. In the
sciences, for example, one has to trust the reliability of the work of one's
colleagues; otherwise, scientific research would have to begin from the start
each time, never progressing because it could not rely on a firm foundation.
Indeed, in all research, we presuppose and trust the work of our colleagues,
and without that trust, we would be unable to move forward in our own work. Similarly,
in the classroom, our students rely on our trustworthiness, on our professional
integrity to render professional judgments impartially. Without that trust, the
classroom dialogue can never really begin. Nor does the trust end there. Our
students must trust us in other ways as well. They must trust us, as we shall
see below, to treat them fairly and with respect. They have to trust us not to
dismiss their ideas as foolish or funny. Indeed, the relationship between
teacher and student is, by its very nature, a relationship of trust because of
the power differential. Professors have power over students in many ways. For
the educational process to work, students have to trust that their professors
will use that power wisely, to further the goals of the student's own education
rather than the professor's self-interest. It is precisely here that the
teacher-student relationship resembles the patient-therapist relationship. In
both cases, trust must be present if the process is to work. Violations of
trust, including sexual exploitation, strike at the very foundation of the
process. Trust, of course, is also a fundamental value in regard to
administration as well. Students need to be able to trust, for example, that
when a university advertises a particular major, it will provide the courses
necessary for students to complete that major. Similarly, ~ faculty need to be
able to trust administrations in a wide range of different ways, including
trusting them to be fair and to be committed to the goals of genuine education.
Respect
Without
respect, individuals may well be unwilling to risk articulating and openly
discussing ideas. A classroom in which ideas and persons are treated with
respect is one in which trust, honesty, and the other academic virtues will
flourish. It is important to note here that respect does not mean agreement. To
respect an idea is to take it seriously on its own merits, to weigh and
appraise it in a professional manner, to be willing to learn from it even if it
challenges some of our firmly held beliefs. Respecting persons involves, among
other things, giving them a place in the community of ideas, even when they
disagree with us. Nor does respect stop with ideas. We must recognize that
others have feelings and experiences that are sometimes far different from our
own. Respect involves acknowledging the legitimacy of their experiences and
feelings without automatically denying our own. This is particularly important
in regard to issues such as racism and sexism, where different people often
have radically different experiences of what they assume is the same
world.
WWW Challenges to Student Academic Integrity
If
we look at the ways in which the Web has impacted student integrity, we see two
principal areas. The first, which involves buying of papers and other
assignments, is not new in kind, but certainly new in scope. The second, which
involves selling (and auctioning) papers and other assignments, is not new, but
the scope is so vastly increased as to present a distinctive challenge.
WWW Challenges to Faculty Academic Integrity
Obviously
in many ways the web offers tremendous opportunities to faculty, especially in
terms of facilitating the possibility of collaborative work and making it much
easier to share information. After all, this is where the Web began, as a
project that would allow scientists at CERN and other places to share
scientific information easily. It also offers the possibility of making much
more material available to students in courses.
Conclusion
The rise of the World Wide Web presents
faculty, students, and administrators with a number of challenges, many of
which raise questions of academic integrity in the full sense outlined at the
beginning of this paper. Some of these are specific questions about issues such
as academic honesty, and I am sure that we will continue to debate the most
effective ways of responding to them in the coming years. However, in large
measure these are mainly questions of how best to respond. The moral goal is
clear, only the path to attaining it is in dispute. Other issues raised by the
growth of the Web strike at the very heart of the integrity of the educational
process, and these are the more vexing. The Web will transform the educational
process--of that, there is little doubt. The challenge, in part pedagogical and
in part ethical, is to determine how we ought to shape education in the future,
given the pervasive background of the Web. In this area, not only is there
debate about means, but the goals themselves are still to be determined.
References
Blum,
Lawrence A. (1994). Moralperception and particularity. Cambridge University
P~ss, Now York. Walzer, Michael (1996). Thick and Thin: Moral Argument at Home
and Abroad. University of Notre Dame Press, West Bend, IN. Stroud, Barry.
(1968) Transcendental arguments. Journal of Philosophy, 65, 241-56.
Biography Lawrence M. Hinman is a Professor of
Philosophy and Director of the Values Institute at the University of San Diego.
He is the author of Ethics: A Pluralistic Approach to Moral Theory, 2nd ed.
(Harcourt, Brace, 1998) and Contemporary Moral Issues, 2nd ed. (Prentice-Hall,
2000) as well as editor of Ethics Updates (http:// ethics.acusd.edu). He is
currently involved in an extensive project to put ethics-related video on the
World Wide Web.

keep up the good work and continue sharing! (DrNoor)
ReplyDeleteThank you Mam... for inspiring me a lot .
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