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‘Turnitin said it wasn’t happy’: can the regulatory discourse of plagiarism detection operate as a change artefact for writing development?
C Penketh, Chris Beaumont
Computer Science
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article (journal)
›
peer-review
14
Citations (Scopus)
79
Downloads (Pure)
Overview
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Dive into the research topics of '‘Turnitin said it wasn’t happy’: can the regulatory discourse of plagiarism detection operate as a change artefact for writing development?'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
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Keyphrases
Assessment in Higher Education
50%
Development Approach
50%
Developmental Model
25%
Higher Education
25%
Learning in Higher Education
25%
Malpractice
25%
Plagiarism Detection
100%
Plagiarism Detection Tools
75%
Qualitative Responses
25%
Regulatory Discourse
100%
Structural Organization
25%
Turnitin
100%
UK Universities
25%
Undergraduate Degree
25%
Writing Development
100%
Arts and Humanities
Departure
16%
Discourse
100%
Initiative
16%
Plagiarism
100%
Structure
16%
Tension
16%
Tutor
33%
Under-graduate
16%
Writing Development
100%
Social Sciences
Academic Teaching Personnel
16%
Focus Group
16%
Good Practice
16%
Legislation
16%
Plagiarism Detection
100%
Structural Organization
16%
UK
16%
Nursing and Health Professions
Malpractice
100%
Tension
100%
Psychology
Focus Group
100%