Facts & Statistics
Research into cheating at the college and university began in 1990 by Dr. Donald McCabe, one of the founders of ICAI. This research continues today, spearheaded by ICAI and its members.
McCabe’s original research and subsequent follow-up studies show that more than 60 percent of university students freely admit to cheating in some form.
In March 2020, ICAI researchers tested an updated version of the McCabe survey with 840 students across multiple college campuses. This work showed the following rates of key cheating behaviors:
- Cheated in any way on an exam
- Getting someone else to do your academic work (e.g. essay, exam, assignment) and submitting it as your own.
- Using unauthorized electronic resources (e.g. articles, Wikipedia, YouTube) for a paper, project, homework or other assignments.
- Working together on an assignment with other students when the instructor asked for individual work.
- Paraphrasing or copying a few sentences or more from any source without citing it in a paper or assignment you submitted.
*This includes data from 5 institutions including a private university, two large public universities, a small public university, and a small private liberal arts college
Rettinger, et al. (2020) in prep
Cheating in High School
McCabe also conducted surveys of over 70,000 high school students at over 24 high schools in the United States. This work demonstrated that 64 percent of students admitted to cheating on a test, 58 percent admitted to plagiarism and 95 percent said they participated in some form of cheating, whether it was on a test, plagiarism or copying homework.
Admitted to cheating on a test
Admitted to plagiarism
Participated in some form of cheating
More about Don McCabe’s surveys and statistics, including sources for these statistics, is available in his excellent book Cheating in College.