CAHA, Zdeněk, Mario BOGDANOVIC and Lara CAKIC. Attitudes to Cheating as a Predictor of Actual Cheating Behaviour: Comparative Analysis of Students of Masters Programmes in Business in Slovakia and Croatia. AD ALTA: Journal of Interdisciplinary Research. Hradec Králové, ČR: Akademické sdružení MAGNANIMITAS Assn., vol. 12, No 2, p. 19-25. ISSN 1804-7890. 2023.
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Basic information
Original name Attitudes to Cheating as a Predictor of Actual Cheating Behaviour: Comparative Analysis of Students of Masters Programmes in Business in Slovakia and Croatia
Name in Czech Postoje k podvádění jako prediktor skutečného podvodného chování: Komparativní analýza studentů magisterských programů se zaměřením na podnikání na Slovensku a v Chorvatsku
Name (in English) Attitudes to Cheating as a Predictor of Actual Cheating Behaviour: Comparative Analysis of Students of Masters Programmes in Business in Slovakia and Croatia
Authors CAHA, Zdeněk (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution), Mario BOGDANOVIC and Lara CAKIC.
Edition AD ALTA: Journal of Interdisciplinary Research, Hradec Králové, ČR, Akademické sdružení MAGNANIMITAS Assn. 2023, 1804-7890.
Other information
Original language Czech
Type of outcome Article in a journal
Field of Study 50200 5.2 Economics and Business
Country of publisher Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
WWW URL
RIV identification code RIV/75081431:_____/23:00002494
Organization unit Institute of Technology and Business in České Budějovice
UT WoS 000921624200003
Keywords (in Czech) podvádění; podvodné chování; postoje k podvádění; pokrytectví; Ajzenova teorie plánovaného chování; organizační chování; řízení lidských zdrojů; OB/HRM
Keywords in English cheating; cheating behaviour; attitudes to cheating; hypocrisy; Ajzen theory of planned behaviour; organisation behaviour; human resources management; OB/HRM
Tags RIV22, RLZ_RLZ, WOS
Changed by Changed by: Barbora Kroupová, učo 25655. Changed: 10/3/2023 10:41.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to gain an insight into the attitudes of students of masters programmes in business towards cheating in exams and how to prevent this and instigate behavioural change. This was done by measuring the actual incidence of cheating, as well as the relationship between attitudes towards cheating and actual behaviour, in order to predict the willingness to cheat. The practical problem was solved by means of selected scientific theories and approaches to attitude and behavioural change in universities and business organisations. The results of the research presented are based on a questionnaire survey conducted among students of masters programmes in business in Slovakia (N=241) and in Croatia (N=156). The questionnaire examined the ethical attitude towards cheating (N=5 items) and the methods applied to cheat in exams (N=10 items). The survey revealed that 83.4% of Slovak and 93% of Croat students of masters programmes in business engaged in some form of cheating behaviour and that the attitude of Slovaks and Croats to cheating statistically significantly differed. A positive attitude towards cheating was found to be held by 17% of Slovak students and 18.6% of Croat students (statistically insignificant difference), a neutral attitude by 47.3% of Slovak students and 30.1% of Croat students (statistically significant difference), and a negative attitude by 34.4% of Slovak students and 51.3% of Croat students (statistically significant difference). The lowest level of cheating behaviour was among those students with a negative attitude to cheating (Slovak sample 19.1% or N=16 hypocritical students; Croatian sample 44.3% or N=35 hypocritical students). Having a positive or neutral attitude to cheating was an excellent predictor of cheating behaviour; a negative attitude proving much weaker. The obtained results have strong implications for the reputations and credibility of universities, as well as have a major impact on organisational behaviour/human resources management (OB/HRM) in business organisations. For universities, the implementation of the Ajzen theory of planned behaviour is proposed. For cheating behaviour in business organisations, preventive and reactive OB/HRM measures are proposed.
Abstract (in English)
The aim of this study was to gain an insight into the attitudes of students of masters programmes in business towards cheating in exams and how to prevent this and instigate behavioural change. This was done by measuring the actual incidence of cheating, as well as the relationship between attitudes towards cheating and actual behaviour, in order to predict the willingness to cheat. The practical problem was solved by means of selected scientific theories and approaches to attitude and behavioural change in universities and business organisations. The results of the research presented are based on a questionnaire survey conducted among students of masters programmes in business in Slovakia (N=241) and in Croatia (N=156). The questionnaire examined the ethical attitude towards cheating (N=5 items) and the methods applied to cheat in exams (N=10 items). The survey revealed that 83.4% of Slovak and 93% of Croat students of masters programmes in business engaged in some form of cheating behaviour and that the attitude of Slovaks and Croats to cheating statistically significantly differed. A positive attitude towards cheating was found to be held by 17% of Slovak students and 18.6% of Croat students (statistically insignificant difference), a neutral attitude by 47.3% of Slovak students and 30.1% of Croat students (statistically significant difference), and a negative attitude by 34.4% of Slovak students and 51.3% of Croat students (statistically significant difference). The lowest level of cheating behaviour was among those students with a negative attitude to cheating (Slovak sample 19.1% or N=16 hypocritical students; Croatian sample 44.3% or N=35 hypocritical students). Having a positive or neutral attitude to cheating was an excellent predictor of cheating behaviour; a negative attitude proving much weaker. The obtained results have strong implications for the reputations and credibility of universities, as well as have a major impact on organisational behaviour/human resources management (OB/HRM) in business organisations. For universities, the implementation of the Ajzen theory of planned behaviour is proposed. For cheating behaviour in business organisations, preventive and reactive OB/HRM measures are proposed.
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