- Conference Session
- Ethical Issues II: Academic Integrity and Student Development
- Collection
- 2012 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
- Authors
-
Isaac W. Wait, Marshall University; Armin Eberlein P.E., American University of Sharjah
- Tagged Divisions
-
Engineering Ethics
Report 33, no. 5 (January 2008): 65-78.[6] Betty Leask (2006): Plagiarism, cultural diversity and metaphor—implications for academic staff development, Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 31:2, 183-199[7] Janice Payan, James Reardon, and Denny E. McCorkle (2010) The Effect of Culture on the Academic Honesty of Marketing and Business Students, Journal of Marketing Education December 2010 32: 275-291,[8] James Ogilvie (2007). The Application of Self-Efficacy and Deterrence Theory to Academic Misconduct: An Examination of Plagiarism among Australian University Students. Honours Thesis. Griffith University. Page
- Conference Session
- Ethical Issues II: Academic Integrity and Student Development
- Collection
- 2012 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
- Authors
-
Angela L. Minichiello, Utah State University; Laurie S. McNeill, Utah State University; Christine E. Hailey, Utah State University
- Tagged Divisions
-
Engineering Ethics
improve the understanding of the learning and teaching of high school students and teachers as they apply engineering design processes to technological problems. She is also the Principal Investigator of the Influence of MESA Activities on Underrepresented Students, a program funded by the DRK-12 program at NSF. This exploratory study examines the influences that those MESA activities have on students’ perception of engineering and their self-efficacy and interest in engineering and their subsequent decisions to pursue careers in engineering. Page 25.330.1 c American Society for