When Kids Cheat on Their Schoolwork: Understanding and Prevention

Student cheating has become increasingly prevalent, with various factors contributing to this concerning trend. Understanding why children resort to academic dishonesty and implementing practical tools can help parents address this issue effectively.

Why Kids Cheat

Pressure to Succeed

Many students are pressured to achieve high grades and meet societal expectations. This pressure can make them prioritize grades over learning, causing them to seek shortcuts through cheating.

Poor Time Management

Students often struggle with balancing multiple assignments and personal commitments. Without proper time management skills, they may resort to cheating as a quick solution to complete their work.

Lack of Interest

Students who don’t find the subject matter engaging or relevant to their future goals may be more inclined to cheat rather than invest time and effort in learning.

Technological Accessibility

The widespread use of smartphones and internet access has made cheating more accessible and tempting for students. With answers readily available online, the line between research and plagiarism can become blurred.

Peer Influence

Students may feel pressured to cheat when they see their peers doing so, fearing they’ll be disadvantaged if they don’t participate.

Practical Tools for Parents

Foster Open Communication

Create an environment where your child feels comfortable discussing academic challenges without fear of judgment. This can help address underlying issues before they lead to cheating.

Teach Time Management Skills

Help your child develop effective scheduling habits using planners or digital tools to break tasks into manageable steps. This can reduce the likelihood of last-minute panic and temptation to cheat.

Emphasize Learning Over Grades

Encourage your child to focus on the learning process rather than just the end result. Praise effort and progress instead of solely rewarding high grades.

Discuss Academic Integrity

Have open conversations about the importance of honesty and the long-term consequences of cheating. Help your child understand that integrity is more valuable than a perfect score.

Collaborate with Teachers

Stay in touch with your child’s teachers to understand assignment expectations and areas where your child might struggle. This allows you to provide targeted support at home.

Limit Technology During Study Time

Create designated study areas with limited access to smartphones or unnecessary internet use. This can help minimize distractions and reduce the temptation to seek easy answers online[2].

Seeking Help

Let your child know it’s okay to ask for help when struggling. Whether from you, their teachers, or tutors, seeking assistance is a better alternative to cheating.

By implementing these strategies and maintaining open dialogue, parents can play a crucial role in fostering academic integrity and helping their children develop strong ethical values that extend beyond the classroom.

He Never Acts This Way At School!

“He Never Acts This Way At School!”
by Ron Huxley, LMFT

“The energy which makes a child hard to manage is the energy which afterward makes him a manager of life.” – Henry Ward Beecher”

by Ron Huxley, LMFT

Have you ever heard a parent say this or perhaps said it yourself? Why do some children misbehave at home and not in other settings, like school? While the opposite situation might be true, where the child misbehaves at school and not home, let’s look at this common parenting frustration.

Teaching is a good definition of balanced discipline. In fact, the word discipline comes from the root word “disciplinare” which means to teach or instruct. Most parents understand discipline as reducing inappropriate behaviors (punishment) instead of helping children achieve competence, self-control, self-direction, and social skills. Of course, all parents want this but reinforcing appropriate behaviors seems like a luxury or fantasy when parents are having big problems with their children.

The Parenting Juggling Act

One reason for this may be the act of juggling work and family that so many contemporary parents find themselves performing. In this situation, only the most annoying or irritating behaviors are sure to get a parents attention. Children quickly learn that good behavior or even quiet, a self-directed behavior rarely gets the attention of overloaded parents. Good behavior is one less thing a parent has to deal with while bad behavior guarantees parents attention. This is what educators and therapists call “negative attention” – a powerful reinforcer of children’s misbehavior.

What’s the Model?

So when parents wonder why their child doesn’t misbehave in school we should investigate the school/teaching model a little closer to see what frustrated parents can use at home. Of course, as any teacher will admit, perfect behavior from children never occurs at school or anywhere else but let’s compare school behaviors to home discipline.

Schools are learning environments. Discipline requires a learning environment characterized by positive, nurturing parent-child relationships. Is your home a learning environment or an entertainment center? Are their books, activities and private spaces for children?

Teachers use a curriculum. Discipline occurs when a plan or structure is in place for children. Do you know what you want to teach your children? What values or ideas do you want your children to believe? Is there a set time or routine for learning these things? Are you available to the child for help and instruction? Do you have materials available to educate you about topics you want to teach your children? Are there regular discussions about daily responsibilities, spiritual ideas, personal dreams, and problem areas?

Grades are used to evaluate a child’s progress. Discipline can be both an instruction and a measurement of children’s behavior. What grade would you give your child in hygiene, social ability, responsibility, etc.? What rewards (physical or verbal) are given for “A” grades? Are parent-child conferences held to discuss strengths and weaknesses and make a plan for improvement? Do children get regular feedback from parents on how they are doing at home?

Teachers are in charge of the classroom and model appropriate behavior. Discipline is most effective when parents remember that they are the leaders of the home and “practice what they preach.” Are you firm and consistent in your discipline with your children? Do you model appropriate behavior for your children? Do you give the things, to your children, that you ask for, from your children, such as respect? Do you say what you mean rather than threaten or bribe children? Do you have a list of rules posted where children can see them? Do you allow children to “raise their hands” and ask questions? Do you listen attentively to those questions and give an appropriate answer?

Children are given opportunities to explore and understand the world and themselves. Discipline is about internal control and not just external control. Do you give your child choices that require him or her to think about consequence? Are children recognized for behaving in an appropriate manner? Are there any “field trips” that children go on to inspire, instruct, or experience appropriate behavior? Are children give opportunities to act in a responsible and trustworthy manner? Are children encouraged to help their siblings and work as teams? Are there any parties for celebrating hard work?

Classrooms have rules that children must follow. Are their assigned seats at the dinner table or car? Are there any rules about waiting, talking, and seeking help? Do children get to “line up first” or “pass out the snacks” for exemplary behaviors? Are consequences given for inappropriate behaviors? Do children get warnings about misbehavior? Do children get to go to recess when they misbehave? Are the rules discussed with the children, posted where everyone can see them, and frequently reviewed?

Schools have recesses, school holidays, and summer breaks. Discipline is about doing nothing as much as it is about doing something. Do you allow your child to make mistakes and decide difficult (but not dangerous) situations on their own? Are there healthy balances between fun and chores, rest and responsibilities, work-time and playtime? Do you allow your child to simply be a child? Are developmental expectations appropriate to the age and abilities of your child? Do you allow yourself to be off-duty by having other adults to watch over your children? Are plans made, in family meetings, for fun as a family? Is quality time a regular part of your time with your children?

Novel Situations

While this may not cover all aspects of school routines or discipline practices, it does ask some very reflective questions. It is possible we missed the most basic reason for children’s different behaviors, namely, novel situations and conditional love. Novel situations refer to a phenomenon that affects a child’s behavior when in a new environment. A new environment is unpredictable and may require a child to be on his or her best behavior until the child learns what the rules and consequences are or what they can get away with. Home is often predictable. The child already knows what they can or cannot get away with.

Conditional vs Unconditional Love

Conditional love refers to the communication of worth a child will get from another individual based on their behavior. A teacher may only consider certain behaviors to be worthy of his or her love and care. At the root, this is a good strategy. It advocates reinforcing only positive behaviors and ignoring negative behavior but the long-term fruit can have devastating consequences for children’s self-esteem. A child’s sense of self should never be based on conditions. A child is worthy of love, dignity, and worth regardless of what they do. Reinforcement and even approval can be placed on a child’s behavior to communicate what is appropriate or inappropriate. A child may not feel this conditional love at home, knowing that mom will always love him or her and so manipulate this to their advantage.

Take a few moments to review these questions. If you are one of those parents who has said, “My child never behaves this way at school?” maybe now, you can finally find out why, and be able to say your child behaves appropriately at home as well as school.

> Get more tools for the job of parenting with an online consult. Contact Ron today at rehuxley@gmail.com for more information…