A guide for creating academic integrity resources for international students in Australian higher education

Research shows that international students, particularly those whose first language is not English, need additional support when studying in Australia to learn and apply academic integrity rules and avoid academic misconduct. This brief guide contains tips and suggestions for creating academic integrity resources and awareness campaigns for international students. The guide also offers practical strategies and templates for developing effective academic integrity resources and awareness campaigns targeted at this group.

Key considerations for international student academic integrity campaigns

  1. Use clear, simple English and provide translated versions in written formats.
  2. Intervene early and repeatedly, make sure that messaging is delivered pre-enrolment, at enrolment, and subsequently.
  3. Use multiple channels to meet students where they are, including orientation sessions, student accommodation, websites used by students, social media, on-campus locations such as international student offices/spaces, libraries, and other common areas.
  4. Highlight available support to create engagement and assuage anxiety, normalise help-seeking.
  5. Create a bespoke international student academic integrity information website for your institution.
  6. Direct students to your international student academic integrity information website via a flyer/poster and/or online campaign.
  7. Offer workshops and drop-in sessions on academic integrity for international students.

Example poster/flyer/website campaign

Use on-campus and/or online posters or flyers to catch students’ attention and direct them to bespoke international student academic integrity resources on your institution’s website. An annotated example is provided later in this guide.

Tips for posters

  1. Use an attention-grabbing tagline/headline (see examples later) in a large bold font.
  2. Translate the attention-grabbing headline into the most common languages spoken by students at your institution, making multiple versions if needed.
  3. If using automatic translation tools, check the translation is correct by translating back to English, checking with a native speaker (staff or students), or checking with a language expert at your institution if your institution teaches languages other than English. Revise as necessary.
  4. Link to further information on your institution’s website. For online campaigns use obvious clickable links or buttons, for paper-based posters or use a QR code for your link.

Example attention-grabbing

  • Learn what cheating means in Australia
  • In Australia, rules about cheating are strict, learn more
  • Don’t get in trouble for cheating, learn the Australian rules
  • Don’t get in trouble for cheating, learn the [INSERT INSTITUTION NAME] rules
  • Learn what Australians mean by 'Academic Integrity'
  • Know the rules: study smarter, not harder
  • Avoid risky shortcuts: ask before you act
  • Your success, your integrity: learn the rules today
  • In Australia, “helping a friend” can sometimes be cheating, know the difference

Suggested content for international student academic integrity website

Generally speaking, most browsers will now translate website for users to their preferred languages. Because of this, unlike posters/flyers, it should not be necessary to translate an international-student academic-integrity webpage. However, it is worth checking the accuracy of any automatic translation with a bilingual staff member or student.

Section Content for students 
Homepage Introduction (video welcome message from staff/student). Consider an interactive 'Start Here' button
What is academic integrity? Provide definitions and examples, e.g. from your institution’s policy
Types of academic misconduct Provide a list of forms of academic misconduct with examples
Tips on good academic practice Examples and information about referencing, citation and paraphrasing
Penalties warning Inform students about academic misconduct processes and penalties
Specific contract cheating warnings Alert students to the problem that some cheating providers claim to be 'study help' sites, and may engage in criminal behaviours such as blackmailing students who use their services
Specific gen AI information Provide information on or links to your institution’s policy on the acceptable use of gen AI in assessment
Case studies Brief anonymized real cases of academic misconduct at your institution
Help and resources Links to academic support, international student supports, and library or other supports for referencing
Quiz and self-check tools Repeatable online quizzes on academic integrity rules for formative feedback or directions to institution-wide academic integrity modules

 

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