Building a Culture of Academic Integrity: Meeting Students Where They Are

Authors

  • Holly Salmon Instructor
  • Shannon Moist

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11575/cpai.v6i1.76927

Keywords:

collaborative, student-centred, academic integrity, Canadian Symposium on Academic Integrity

Abstract

How can we meet students where they are to provide academic integrity instruction? By moving to the centre of campus and engaging students in walk-up learning opportunities outside the classroom. In this presentation, faculty members from the Library and Learning Centre will share their collaborative experiences in creating new academic integrity supports for students in an institution where Academic Integrity does not fall under the umbrella of an institution's Teaching & Learning Centre or a dedicated Academic Integrity Office.

Participants will learn about a new collaborative initiative to engage students in learning about academic integrity that includes a series of interactive activities in a central space on campus. This collaborative tabling between the Library, Learning Centre, and Student Life allows students to explore ideas they have, ask questions, and engage in learning activities outside the “normal” learning environment of classroom, library and tutoring spaces and connect the students to the services offered for deeper learning through knowledge of the available resources. Time will be reserved for others to share similar programming and ideas.

 

Author Biography

Shannon Moist

Shannon Moist is Head of Reference Services at Douglas College Library. She formerly taught high school math and science and has an interest in pedagogy, curriculum development, academic integrity, and student engagement. 

References

McCabe, D.L., Butterfield, K.D., Trevino, L.K. (2012). Cheating in college: Why students do it and what educators can do about it. Johns Hopkins University Press.

Downloads

Published

2023-07-31

How to Cite

Salmon, H., & Moist, S. . (2023). Building a Culture of Academic Integrity: Meeting Students Where They Are. Canadian Perspectives on Academic Integrity, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.11575/cpai.v6i1.76927

Issue

Section

Canadian Symposium on Academic Integrity