One of the worldās leading experts on essay mills and contract cheating has died.
Tracey Bretag was born in Woy Woy, New South Wales in 1962 and grew up in Newcastle (in the same state) and then Rockhampton, Queensland. She did a first degree in English and history at James Cook University (1984) and then left Australia for most of the next decade. After two years in Canada, she returned home, travelled overland to England and then sailed a 37-foot catamaran to Lisbon and across the Atlantic to the Caribbean before spending time in both New York and Dallas.
Professor Bretag moved back to Australia in 1993, gained a qualification in teaching English as a second language and found work in a Japanese secondary school (1996-98). After returning home once more, she had short-term posts at Flinders University and the University of Adelaide before moving to the University of South Australia for the rest of her career. Initially a lecturer in management, she went on to become director of the Global Experience Program (2012-14), director of the Office for Academic Integrity (2015-18) and, from 2019, professor (higher education).
Academic integrity was also at the heart of the research carried out by Professor Bretag, who claimed that her work was motivated by āa commitment to positive student learning outcomes and protection of the values and quality of higher educationā. She was the founding editor of theĀ International Journal for Educational IntegrityĀ and editor-in-chief of theĀ Handbook of Academic IntegrityĀ (2016). Major projects explored whetherĀ switching from essays to examsĀ was a good way to stamp out cheating; the widespread use ofĀ essay mills and contract cheating;Ā and how such practices could beĀ ānipped in the budāĀ by introducing āappropriate penaltiesā.
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Thomas Lancaster, senior teaching fellow in computing at Imperial College London, described Professor Bretag as someone whose āpassion for integrity shone through in her work, editing books and journals, delivering training courses, writing papers and leading research projects.
āThe last time I saw Tracey was in Calgary last year, where sheād travelled across the globe to inspire and motivate the fledgling Canadian academic integrity community. Even though she was ailing, Tracey was determined to go through with the gruelling programme of workshops, talks and advisory meetings sheād agreed...There couldnāt have been an academic integrity community without Tracey.ā
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Professor Bretag died of cancer on 7 October and is survived by her husband Philip Norris, a daughter, a son and two grandchildren.
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