MBA Students More Likely to Cheat, New Survey Finds
Published on 9/26/2006
A survey of 5,331 students at 32 graduate schools in the United States and
Canada found an "alarming" amount of cheating across disciplines, but more among
the nation's future business leaders. Fifty-six percent of graduate business
students admitted they had cheated at least once in the last year, compared with
47 percent of non-business students.
The students, who were surveyed between 2002 and 2004, told researchers from
Pennsylvania State, Rutgers and Washington State universities that the most
important reason for cheating was that they thought that other students were
doing it.
"People tend to do what they think other people are doing," said Linda Klebe
Trevino, one of the researchers and a professor of organizational behavior at
Penn State's Smeal College of Business. "The fact that other people are doing it
creates an environment where this is normative."
The study asked about 13 different types of cheating, ranging from copying a
classmate's test answers to lifting sentences from the Internet without
attribution.
Poor Role Models
The results come amid a growing list of corporate ethics scandals, including
faulty accounting to boost earnings, and, more recently, the back-dating of
stock options grants, a tactic that makes executive pay even more lucrative.
While there is no proof that students who would cheat on a test might later
cheat stockholders, the researchers said it made sense that people who would
bend one rule might bend another.
Several studies have found that undergraduate business students are more
inclined to cheat than others, but this is the first to report on graduate
students at multiple schools, Trevino said. The study, released last week, has
been accepted for publication by the Academy of Management Learning and
Education, she said.
In the graduate-school survey, business students were more likely than students
in different fields to work with others on written assignments when they had
been told explicitly to work alone and to use "cut and paste plagiarism" or
snippets of uncited information from the Internet.
Business students were also more likely to find out about a test from a fellow
student who had taken it, a problem professors could remedy by giving different
versions of the test, the authors said.
Looking for Answers
Why business students would cheat more than others is a matter of conjecture.
Trevino said it might be that students who were drawn to business school were
more self-interested or bottom-line-oriented.
Some studies also suggest that business school, with its emphasis on the free
market and maximization of shareholder value, changes student attitudes.
Donald McCabe, a management professor at Rutgers who led the study, said one
reason business students might cheat more is that they were more likely to
encounter questions they could answer with one word or number, not an essay.
"Compared to many of the other disciplines, if you can glance over and see
somebody else's test or exam, there's a high premium for that," he said.
The "more important and more discouraging" explanation he hears from students is
that "they're just emulating the behavior they see out in the business world."
There, they say, "it doesn't matter how you get it done. The key thing is to get
it done."
Courtesy of Miami Herald



