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Plagiarism or Knowledge Synthesis? Ghanaian University Students’ Conceptions of Academic Writing
0
Zitationen
6
Autoren
2025
Jahr
Abstract
This study examines the conceptions of plagiarism, knowledge synthesis, and the ethical implications of using digital writing tools such as Grammarly, ChatGPT, and Turnitin by Ghanaian university students. Although existing scholarship largely emphasises plagiarism detection mechanisms, little research has considered students’ perspectives within Ghana’s unique cultural and linguistic context. Guided by Bakhtin’s (1981) notion of dialogism, the study highlights how students negotiate among their ideas, digital tools, and institutional expectations. Using semi-structured and open-ended questions, data were collected from 2,000 undergraduate and graduate students at a Ghanaian public university. The findings reveal that although 65.3% of the students reported a theoretical understanding of knowledge synthesis, many struggled with its practical application, especially when engaging with AI-generated content. Moreover, 65.9% did not consistently evaluate whether AI-assisted writing required citation, exposing misconceptions about authorship and originality. Digital tools were primarily used for surface-levels corrections (e.g., grammar checks via Grammarly) rather than for dialogic engagement with academic sources, fostering a reactive rather than reflective approach to writing. Institutional gaps such as ambiguous AI citation policies and training that focused more on tool operation than ethics exacerbated these challenges. The students proposed interventions that included mandatory ethics workshops (60%), improved access to instructional resources (30%), and curriculum-integrated academic integrity training (10%). The study underscores the tension between technological convenience and scholarly rigour. It advocates for localised citation guidelines, improved digital literacy, and reformed assessment strategies, contributing to global discourses on academic integrity while centering students’ lived experiences in digital writing environments.
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