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nomad soul

Joined: 31 Jan 2010 Posts: 11454 Location: The real world
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Posted: Wed Dec 30, 2015 12:44 pm Post subject: UAE study: Girls less likely to cheat on exams |
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Girls less likely to cheat exams than boys, UAE study shows
By Roberta Pennington, The National | December 23, 2015
Source: http://www.thenational.ae/uae/education/girls-less-likely-to-cheat-exams-than-boys-uae-study-shows
ABU DHABI // Girls are more honest and more ethical than boys, a new UAE study suggests. They are less likely than boys to cheat in exams and more likely than boys to support tough punishment for those who do cheat. As part of the study, a group of schoolchildren were given a written quiz and told not to turn the paper over because the answers were on the other side. Twelve per cent of girls cheated; 18 per cent of boys did not.
“For me the sheer size of the gender differences was most surprising,” said Dr Calvert Jones, an assistant professor of government and politics at the University of Maryland, College Park, and author of the study. “In many scenarios, girls judged ethical lapses more harshly than boys. This is a difference that also appears in studies in other countries, although not usually as large.” Dr Jones also surveyed 172 pupils at two public high schools, one for boys and one for girls. Of those, 62.8 per cent were Emirati and the rest expatriate Arabs. They were asked about their attitudes to issues such as copying homework, bribes and nepotism. The study found girls more likely to deal honestly with ethical dilemmas and “tended towards harsher punishments for unethical acts”. They also “judged various ethically questionable actions as less justifiable compared with the ways in which boys judged the same actions”.
The study is published by the Sheikh Saud bin Saqr Al Qasimi Foundation for Policy Research. Dr Natasha Ridge, executive director of the foundation, said the findings would help policymakers and educators to understand what drives cheating and identify the conditions in which pupils were more or less likely to cheat. The study also found that when students were placed in diverse groups, such as a mix of Arab expats and Emiratis, the group was more creative, innovative and better at problem-solving than a homogenous group. A mixed group of pupils was also more likely to judge unethical behaviour as unacceptable.
“Cheating is a phenomenon that occurs throughout the world, in every country. However, its impact on social trust means that the issue must be addressed in light of the UAE’s progressive approach to development,” Dr Ridge said. “It is very important to continue to do research on these and other issues in education – not to shame schools, individuals or systems, but to help develop and improve them in order that the UAE can become one of the top countries in the world for education.”
Dr Jones said a nationally representative sample of students would be needed to confirm the preliminary findings, but the study offered “one building block that can provide important insights about the factors that affect ethical decision-making and the kinds of reasoning people use as they are faced with ethical dilemmas”. She said more research was needed to help answer the questions raised by the study.
“We need to know more about why girls in this study showed more ethical decision-making compared with boys,” Dr Jones said. “The strategies that we might be able to use to promote ethical decision-making should also be studied more systematically and more broadly in government bureaucracies, the private sector, and in academic settings. Beginning in the schools, social norms against cheating and other forms of rule-breaking should be communicated clearly, and more consistently upheld, so that young people are aware of expectations.”
(End of article) |
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veiledsentiments

Joined: 20 Feb 2003 Posts: 17644 Location: USA
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Posted: Wed Dec 30, 2015 4:07 pm Post subject: Re: UAE study: Girls less likely to cheat on exams |
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nomad soul wrote: |
Girls less likely to cheat exams than boys, UAE study shows
“We need to know more about why girls in this study showed more ethical decision-making compared with boys,” Dr Jones said. |
The answer to that question is totally obvious in the difference in the way that they are raised. It is the girls who are surrounded by rules and restrictions from very young and their breaking these rules bring serious punishments. The boys have no rules and no discipline whatsoever until way too late...
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Gulezar
Joined: 19 Jun 2007 Posts: 483
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Posted: Thu Dec 31, 2015 6:44 am Post subject: Re: UAE study: Girls less likely to cheat on exams |
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nomad soul wrote: |
Beginning in the schools, social norms against cheating and other forms of rule-breaking should be communicated clearly, and more consistently upheld, so that young people are aware of expectations.” (End of article) |
Yes, and the norms should be conveyed in the home, even before the student enters school. The habit of reading for pleasure and asking questions should also be encouraged. Clearly, there is an incredible amount of funds spent on studies of what schools must do, at some point the integration of home and school as a learning unit, not as antagonists, needs to be addressed.
The problem is that the students are well aware of the expectations, and they know that there will be no consequences for them if they cheat; however, there will be hell to pay for a teacher who suggests that a student has cheated.
Think about it. When you were a kid, if the teacher called the house, were you afraid of the teacher or of what Dad was going to do after he got the message? |
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