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2020 ◽  
pp. 256-261
Author(s):  
LEIGH WAKEFIELD
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Sarjiyus O.

Owing to the difficulties that are faced by staff in transferring information/data, unwilling attitude of some Concordia College staff when checking their students’ information, fragile nature of students’ information, and difficulties parent encountered when checking their wards information, coupled with time wasted in manual processing of students’ information, this project aimed at developing an Online Help Desk system to checkmate the difficulties parent and staff encounter when trying to check for information about Concordia College and its students/wards. The system development methodology adopted for this research was Structured System Analysis and Design Methodology. Flowchart, use-case diagram, database design and entity-relationship model were used to define the system design. PHP, HTML, CSS, Bootstrap Frontend Framework, jQuery and MySQL were the technologies used in implementation of the new system. The new developed system is achieving the aim of this study. It was recommended that Concordia College, Yola should increase the awareness level of the existence of this system, other schools should also adopt this type of system to enable easy information dissemination to parents/guardians of prospective students, and that future researchers in this field should consider developing mobile versions of this kind of system, to facilitate accessibility and use by various stakeholders.


2018 ◽  
Vol 79 (4) ◽  
pp. 186 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin Baggett ◽  
Virginia Connell ◽  
Allie Thome

Inspired by the ACRL Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education, librarians at the Carl B. Ylvisaker Library at Concordia College-Moorhead decided to scrap our old information literacy assessment plan and start from scratch. We began by digging into the library’s past assessment plans in an attempt to gain insight into how the organization’s priorities have changed over time. The earliest assessment notes we uncovered were from 2005 and featured a new student orientation pre- and post-test, administered to a random sample of library users. The focus then was on incoming students’ information literacy abilities and how much they learned during library orientation. A sketch of an abandoned assessment plan from 2010 marked a turn to assessing the library’s instruction program and featured the use of focus groups along with a survey in which alumni were asked how the instruction program may have impacted their life after college. With this pivot towards instruction, the library developed a list of learning outcomes and tracked them to the ACRL Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education. This list was used in-house for designing assignments and linked on our library web page to provide faculty with an overview of the program.


Author(s):  
Tracey Bretag

Welcome to the last issue of the International Journal for Educational Integrity for 2014, and the last time the journal will be independently published using the Open Journal System. I am pleased to report that from 1 January 2015, the IJEI will be officially published by Springer. While the journal will remain Open Access, this is a very important step forward for the IJEI, which was established in 2005. In addition to providing very much needed administrative and editorial support, Springer will also provide many advantages, including: 1. Increased journal ranking and status; 2. Longterm sustainability; 3. Increased marketing; and 4. An anticipated improvement in the quality of submissions. I will continue as Executive Editor and hope to entice new members to the Editorial Board from a range of institutions and disciplines. This issue, like so many during the last decade, is an eclectic mix of papers from a variety of countries and disciplinary perspectives, and provides unique viewpoints on the meaning and implementation of educational/academic integrity. Opening the issue, Colin James (University of Newcastle, Australia) and Saadia Mahmud (formerly of University of South Australia) demonstrate that law students are a 'special case' in academic integrity education. Reporting on data from interviews with 12 legal academics who participated in the Australian Academic Integrity Standards Project, James and Mahmud maintain that there are significant and longterm consequences of academic integrity investigations for law students. The authors propose increased clarity and uniformity in the rules of disclosure for graduating law students, as well as an approach which situates academic integrity education as "emergent professional integrity". Minka Rissanen and Erika Lofstrom, both from the University of Helsinki, Finland, extend their thinking from a paper delivered at the 3rd World Research Integrity Conference (2013), which explored the ability of students to identify ethical issues in research and the role that the learning environment played in the process. Based on relatively small sample of 87, largely comprised of female students, the authors found no statistically significant relationships between ethical sensitivity, empathy, and the experience of ethical aspects in the learning climate, no difference between psychology and educational science students in terms of their ethical competencies, and no relationship between age and ethical sensitivity. Given the limitations of their own sample, Rissanen and Lofstrom call for more research which investigates the role of learning environments to support and develop students' research ethics. Moving from disciplinary and pedagogic issues to the broader institutional context, Michael Bath, Peter Hovde and former students of Concordia College in Minnesota, USA, hypothesised that the influences unique to a small, church-affiliated liberal arts college would have a discernible impact on cheating attitudes and practices. Their analysis of data from two student surveys in 2008 and 2010 demonstrates that in fact, the "small college culture" of Concordia College was only partially effective in discouraging academic dishonesty, and that the impact of the religion requirement was insignificant. The authors conclude that in light of the finding that cheating behaviours and attitudes at Concordia College are generally similar to larger, more "impersonal" institutions, the College should consider adopting a formal Honor Code, in line with recommendations by Don McCabe and colleagues. Greg Wheeler, from Sapporo Medical University, Japan, takes the debate a step further and examines the broader culture and its impact on students' attitudes to plagiarism. Using data from a survey administered to students at eight Japanese universities (n=483), Wheeler challenges the perceived wisdom that students from South East Asian countries are unaware that copying without appropriate attribution is a breach of academic integrity. He concludes that "Japanese students almost overwhelmingly view plagiarism as wrong and believe in the importance of providing citations to works they have used", with the exception of Medical students who appeared to place less emphasis on the importance of citation than students in other disciplines, including Health Sciences. Furthermore, and in sharp contrast with previous research, Wheeler found that the majority of Japanese students are, in fact, provided with instruction on citation techniques. Wheeler's article makes an important contribution to ongoing discussions about the role of culture in students' understandings of academic conventions, and has the potential to have a direct impact on teaching and learning practises, as well as universities' responses to student plagiarism. The final paper in this issue by Amanda Sladek from the University of Kansas, USA, offers a novel perspective on the meaning of educational integrity. The author interrogates how narratives of for-profit education contribute to public perceptions of institutional integrity, while exploring the complex role that audience plays in the consumption and production of these narratives. Sladek's analysis draws on the case of Dana College, a small non-profit liberal arts college that suspended operations in 2010 after an unsuccessful attempt to transfer ownership to a for-profit entity. Using recent theories in Rhetoric and Composition, Sladek invites the reader "to use the contested and contentious nature of for-profit education as a way to renegotiate what global education will look like in the years to come". On that challenging note, I will end by wishing you all the best for a stimulating read of this last issue to be published by the Open Journal System. I look forward to continuing to contribute to this fascinating field of inquiry in 2015 as Executive Editor of the International Journal for Educational Integrity, published by Springer. Tracey Bretag, Editor November 2014


1997 ◽  
Vol 90 (2) ◽  
pp. 130-131

Problems 1, 8, 10, and 24 were submitted by Stanley F. Taback, Lehman College—CUNY, Bronx, NY 10468-1589, and Jennifer Taback, University of Chicago. Problems 2–5 appear in the article “Mathematics Competitions for Students under 15 in Austria,” which appears in Mathematics Competitions (8 [1995]), a journal of the World Federation of National Mathematics Competitions. The authors, Robert Geretschläger and Gottfried Perz, granted permission to include the problems. Robert Geretschläger may be reached at Bundesrealgymnasium, Keplerstrasse 1, A-8020 Graz, Austria. Gottfried Perz teaches at Pestolozzigymnasium in Graz, Austria. Problems 6 and 7 were contributed by Alton T. Olson and Lynn Gordon, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2G5. Problems 9, 14, 16, and 28 were originally prepared by Eileen Shannon for the Hamilton Junior Mathematics Contest. They were subsequently contributed for the February Calendar by Eileen Shannon, Westmount Secondary School, Hamilton, Ontario. Problems 11–13 were contributed by Catherine Gorini and Eric Hart, Maharishi International University, Fairfield, IA 52557-1052, and Teddy Hirsch, Maharishi School, Fairfield, IA 52556. Problems 15, 17–20, 22, 25, and 26 were submitted by Patricia A. Brosnan, Ohjo State University, Columbus, OH 43210-1172. The problems were created by students James A. FitzSimmons, Ji Yon Kim, Marsha Nichol, and Ronnie Pavlov. Problems 21 and 23 were contributed by William K. Tomhave, Concordia College, Moorhead, Minnesota. Major assistance was provided by Charles Heuer, Gerald Heuer, and Roger Ragland, all of Concordia College. Problem 27 appeared ill the 1995 Invitational Mathematics Challenge (Grade 10), a contest prepared by the Canadian Mathematics Competition, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON N2L 3Gl.


1990 ◽  
Vol 67 (4) ◽  
pp. 323
Author(s):  
E. Daniel McKenna

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