Essay Topic Hub

Cheating
Essays

527+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

527 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Cheating as an academic subject sits at the intersection of education, ethics, and behavioral psychology. It appears most often in education courses, applied ethics classes, and writing-intensive general education requirements. What makes it academically interesting is the gap between widely shared moral norms against dishonesty and the frequency with which cheating actually occurs. The topic invites students to examine how institutional structures, personal values, and social pressures combine to shape behavior, making it relevant across disciplines from business ethics to educational policy.

The papers archived here approach cheating from several distinct angles. Some focus specifically on college students and the motivations behind academic dishonesty, while others treat cheating as a broader ethical problem that surfaces in professional and competitive contexts — including business decision-making and even sports. Causal analysis is a common framework, asking why cheating happens rather than simply describing that it does. Other papers take an opinion-driven or reflective stance, engaging personal experience alongside ethical reasoning. Plagiarism appears as a closely related subtopic, and moral dilemma framing shows up as a way to analyze the decision-making process itself.

A strong essay on cheating needs a focused, arguable thesis — claiming that cheating is wrong is not enough; explaining what conditions produce it or what responses effectively reduce it gives a paper real direction. Evidence drawn from educational research, documented case studies, or clearly reasoned ethical frameworks tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating cheating as a simple character flaw, which forecloses analysis; stronger essays examine the systemic and situational factors that make dishonest behavior more or less likely.

Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Janet Cooke and journalistic ethics in American newspapers
¶ … Media and honesty in the media [...] Janet Cooke, the prize-winning journalist who made up a story about an inner-city young boy who was a heroin addict. Cooke's story shows the pressure many journalists face and…
Paper Doctorate
Individuals Are Unable to Comprehend
This paper discuses in regard to several short stories and essays related to human nature, the effect that colonialism has had on it, and the general attitudes that people are likely to express in particular circumstances. The essay also speaks about present-day conditions in Syria and provides a short story focused on the importance (or unimportance)of telling the truth.
Paper Masters
Sibling Violence High Risk Behavior
This is an analysis of a test study on the correlation between sibling abuse and high risk behavior among children. The analysis measures the data and methods used, the validity of the theory, and the generalizability of the study. Personal assessment of the paper and its usability is also offered at the end.
Paper Masters
Question analysis and response framework
This essay consists of answers to the following questions based on supplied reading material: 1. Is "Business Ethics" a Contradiction in Terms? 2. Are there any values or virtues necessary for free economies to flourish? If so, what are they? How can they be fostered? 3. Do Americans share any ethical values? If so, what are they? 4. The Declaration of Independence refers to the "pursuit of happiness." Should the word "pleasure" be substituted for "happiness"? Why or Why not? 5. Agree or disagree with the following comment from a student found responsible for cheating. Be sure to explain your answer: Q. Is engaging in cheating fair to honest students? A. I don't think of it like that. I know some students do. But the attitude is generally, this is the way it is. When they work, a lot of these kids, either their fathers work in business, whatever they do, they get a shortcuts the other guy doesn't. That's the way I look at it. If I'm sharp enough to know the right people to get what I need, and he's not, then that's the point of the whole thing. 6. "Sample Dialogue: A case of cheating." G (1). What do you find convincing in the dialogue? Why? What is unconvincing? Why? G (2). On a scale of 1 - 10 (10 being excellent), how would you rate the dialogue? Please explain your answer. G (3). Pick any one of the dean's answers or comments in the dialogue. Rewrite the answer or comment to reflect a better argument, from the dean's point of view. 7. What is the single most important thing the University can do to promote academic integrity on campus? Please thoroughly explain your answer. 8. Do you agree or disagree with Professor Couser, author of the "Dear Plagiarist" article? Why? What are two main points he is trying to communicate to students in this article.
Essay Doctorate
Women who remain with psychopathic partners: findings and case analysis
Finding out that one's husband does not care about anybody but themselves and is a psychopath, could be among the worse things for a wife to hear, but it has happened, and it continues to happen in hundreds of…
Thesis Undergraduate
Human resources management practices and principles
If what is learned in an important college or university course is not put to use in some pragmatic way – or understood in the larger social context – then that learning may be viewed as meaningless time spent. No doubt there is a percentage of students that are simply going through the process of education, working for a degree that will open doors and lead, hopefully, to the good life. But for many others, learning – in this case about human resources, management, employee / employer dynamics, and ethical considerations therein – means being stimulated to grasp the links to the world that are discovered through serious attention to course work.
Paper Undergraduate
Falls Great Falls One Form
Richard Ford's "Great Falls" is an example of a post-World War II American tragedy. From the point of view of a teen aged boy, this short story details the destruction of an American family. The husband, wife, and son are all tragic figures and a fictional representation which mirrors the lives of millions of real people whom divorce has affected.
Paper Undergraduate
Personal and Professional Change Over
Over time, many people will experience some defining moments in their lives that will serve to clearly demarcate their transition from one stage to another. Events such as high school graduation, marriage, deaths and so…
Paper Undergraduate
Negotiations -- Real Life Bargaining
Negotiations -- Real Life Bargaining and Negotiation
Research Paper Undergraduate
Ripening of Age the Short
The short story, "Ripe Figs" written by Kate Chopin is a story about a young girl named Babette and her godmother, Maman-Nainaine. When reading the story, it appears that Babette is very eager to go to Bayou-Lafourche…