School of Medicine and Health Sciences Poster Presentations

Poster Number

214

Document Type

Poster

Keywords

PA education; Academic Integrity; Cheating

Publication Date

3-2016

Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to assess Physician Assistant (PA) students’ attitudes and experiences toward academic dishonesty during training and to determine whether PA students self-report cheating during PA school.

Methods: An anonymous, quantitative, exploratory, descriptive survey was sent to clinical-year PA students enrolled in PA programs accredited by the Accreditation Review Commission on Education for the Physician Assistant (ARC-PA).

Results: A sample of 493 self-selected PA students in their clinical year of training responded to the survey. Only 3% of clinical-year PA students self-reported cheating during PA school. Males self-reported significantly higher rates of cheating in PA school than females. The most common cheating behavior that clinical-year PA students reported either observing or hearing about in PA school was receiving information about an exam prior to its administration (70.9%). The attitudinal statement that respondents most strongly agreed to was “cheaters in PA school just end up hurting themselves in the long run.” The strongest predictor for cheating in PA school was a history of cheating as an undergraduate.

Conclusion: This study confirmed previous research indicating that academic dishonesty exists in PA education. It also determined that clinical-year PA students attitudes toward and experiences with academic dishonesty vary.

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License.

Open Access

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Presented at: GW Research Days 2016

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Attitudes Toward Academic Dishonesty in Physician Assistant Students

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to assess Physician Assistant (PA) students’ attitudes and experiences toward academic dishonesty during training and to determine whether PA students self-report cheating during PA school.

Methods: An anonymous, quantitative, exploratory, descriptive survey was sent to clinical-year PA students enrolled in PA programs accredited by the Accreditation Review Commission on Education for the Physician Assistant (ARC-PA).

Results: A sample of 493 self-selected PA students in their clinical year of training responded to the survey. Only 3% of clinical-year PA students self-reported cheating during PA school. Males self-reported significantly higher rates of cheating in PA school than females. The most common cheating behavior that clinical-year PA students reported either observing or hearing about in PA school was receiving information about an exam prior to its administration (70.9%). The attitudinal statement that respondents most strongly agreed to was “cheaters in PA school just end up hurting themselves in the long run.” The strongest predictor for cheating in PA school was a history of cheating as an undergraduate.

Conclusion: This study confirmed previous research indicating that academic dishonesty exists in PA education. It also determined that clinical-year PA students attitudes toward and experiences with academic dishonesty vary.

 

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