plagiarism. Nevertheless, the Australian students had
a significantly more negative attitude towards
plagiarism compared to the Chinese students. They
highlighted the cross-cultural attitudes the two group
hold that the Chinese students were permissive
towards inappropriate text borrowings that were
conducted with permission and under heavy
workload conditions. This might reflect the collective
responsibility the Chinese community holds
compared to the individual stance of Australians.
Likewise, LoCastro and Masuko (2002) who
disclosed Japanese students’ view on plagiarism
found that aside from the lack of L2 language
proficiency and training, their attitude was shaped by
sociocultural factors. This is due to the fact that prior
to WWII, only the elites were able to go to school and
that the Japanese curriculum has focused on the
content knowledge that it does not teach basic
academic skill, i.e. writing.
In line with these findings, a study conducted in
Malaysian tertiary education setting also found that
the students admitted their acts of academic
dishonesty. Unexpectedly, following one semester of
formal instruction on academic reading and writing,
the participants’ view on plagiarism was unchanged
(Law, Ting and Jerome, 2013). The study measured
the students’ attitude by the penalty they prefer and
the fact that they preferred counselling despite their
misconduct shows that their attitude is culturally
shaped.
Another body of research looked into the students’
authorial identity as a measure the students’
unintentional plagiarism (Pittam et al., 2009;
Ballantine and McCourt Larres, 2012). The
parameters of authorial identity were ‘confidence in
writing’, ‘understanding authorship’ and ‘knowledge
to avoid plagiarism’. The participants in both studies
had under-developed authorial identities which were
likely to correlate with their status as learners.
In regards to the growing students’ improper text
borrowing which opportunity is enlarged by the
Internet (Pennycook, 2016), there are many strategies
that language teachers can utilize to educate, if not to
eliminate the academic dishonesty practices. One of
the strategies is using plagiarism detection software
as part of the pedagogical practice to foster negative
attitude and practice towards plagiarism. As research
suggest (Ledwith and Rísquez, 2008; Youmans,
2011; Vie, 2013; Chew, Ding and Rowell, 2015;
Pennycook, 2016), such software should be used for
education purpose.
Turnitin is a primary plagiarism detection tool
which is popular and convenient. It is licenced in 126
countries and available in 10 languages (Stapleton,
2012). It generates “similarity report” that is easy to
read and colour coded as well as scores for students’
work (Dahl, 2007). The report highlights the
similarity of the text to the sources in the Internet and
their database, displays the similarity in percentage
and shows the sources’ websites. Likewise, the
software is time-saving (Vie, 2013).
Several studies across education contexts revealed
mixed results of the effectiveness of Turnitin in
combating the academic dishonesty. In English as the
first language education contexts, Ledwith and
Rísquez (2008) and Chew, Ding and Rowell (2015)
found that Turnitin discouraged the students to
plagiarize. The Irish students participated in the
research conducted by Ledwith and Rísquez (2008)
generally had positive attitude towards Turnitin.
Also, there was a decrease of Internet plagiarism. The
students, nevertheless, had greater awareness about
the academic dishonesty practises. The awareness
made them feel more responsible that they were
forced to put extra effort into writing. Similarly,
Chew, Ding and Rowell (2015) believed that Turnitin
promote a good assessment for learning utility.
Nevertheless, experiment in the U.S. setting found
that despite the treatment, there was no difference in
the academic dishonesty practices among the
experimental and control group. Therefore, it is
suggested that Turnitin failed to promote students’
plagiarism (Youmans, 2011). Inversely, an
experiment conducted in second language graduate
learners in Hong Kong revealed that there was a
significant difference in the plagiarism that Turnitin
successfully deterred students to plagiarise
(Stapleton, 2012).
All in all, these varied findings show that students’
academic dishonesty is highly cultural and attempts
to instil writing ethics to students are greatly
contextual. Moreover, findings across studies show
the value of Turnitin towards students’ plagiarism.
Therefore, it is worthwhile to consider Turnitin as an
alternative to promote positive academic behavior.
This study offers a perspective of the use of Turnitin
as a tool to instil academic writing positive values and
practices in Indonesia context.
3 METHOD
This research used a qualitative methodology
including online questionnaire and interview to
explore the benefit of Turnitin to students’ academic
writing behaviour. The participants were 18
Indonesian master’s degree scholarship awardees
from different majors. They enrolled in the Academic
The Contribution of Plagiarism Detection Tool to Students’ Academic Writing Behavior
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