From Detection to Prevention: Effective Antiplagiarism Workflows
Overview
A practical workflow shifts focus from one-off detection to integrated prevention: combine detection tools, pedagogy, assignment design, instructor review, and policy. Below is a concise, actionable workflow institutions or instructors can adopt.
6-step workflow (ordered)
-
Design assessments to reduce incentives for cheating
- Use authentic, scaffolded, and iterative assignments (staged drafts, reflections, unique prompts, portfolios).
- Prefer low-stakes frequent submissions over single high-stakes exams.
-
Set clear expectations and train students
- Publish citation rules, acceptable collaboration, and AI-use policies.
- Provide short tutorials and exemplars on attribution and paraphrase.
-
Use detection tools as learning aids, not final judges
- Integrate similarity/AI-checkers (e.g., Turnitin, Copyleaks) with settings that allow student self-checks.
- Explain similarity scores and common false positives (quotes, boilerplate).
-
Collect process evidence
- Require version histories, draft uploads, annotated sources, lab notebooks, or Google Docs edit timelines (e.g., Integrito-style tracking).
- Ask for short process statements or a bibliography of sources consulted.
-
Human review and contextual interpretation
- Instructors review flagged reports alongside student history, writing style consistency, and process artifacts.
- Use rubric-based evaluation for severity (inadvertent citation error → remediation; deliberate copying → sanction
Leave a Reply