Academic examiners assess more than just content. They evaluate whether a dissertation, essay or assignment meets institutional policies and academic-integrity standards, demonstrates rigorous scholarship, and is reproducible and ethical. This guide explains the key checks examiners perform, how they interpret similarity reports, and practical steps you can take to meet expectations.
Why institutional policies matter
Institutions publish academic-integrity policies, submission rules and ethical guidelines to protect scholarship, students and research participants. Examiners use these policies as a baseline for judgement. Failing to meet them can lead to corrections, delays, or formal misconduct investigations.
Key policy areas:
- Academic integrity / plagiarism rules
- Citation and referencing requirements
- Research ethics (IRB, consent, confidentiality)
- Data management and sharing policies
- Format, word count and submission procedures
What examiners look for
Originality and plagiarism checks
Examiners expect original contributions and honest attribution.
- Similarity reports (Turnitin, iThenticate) are used to flag overlaps. Examiners pay attention to where text matches (methods vs discussion) and how much is verbatim.
- Issues flagged include direct plagiarism, excessive quoting, self-plagiarism and evidence of contract cheating.
- Practical resources: see How to Avoid Plagiarism in Dissertations, Essays and Assignments: Paraphrasing, Quoting and Attribution Rules and the Reference Audit Checklist: Ensure Complete and Accurate Citations in Dissertations, Essays and Assignments.
Citation and referencing accuracy
Accurate, consistent referencing is non-negotiable.
- Examiners check that in-text citations match full references and that all sources have complete metadata (authors, year, title, DOI/ISBN where applicable).
- Inconsistencies across citation styles (APA/MLA/Chicago) or missing DOIs can undermine credibility.
- Improve citation skills with: Mastering Citation Styles for Dissertations, Essays and Assignments: APA, MLA, Chicago and More and Creating Perfect Reference Lists and Bibliographies for Dissertations, Essays and Assignments: Common Mistakes to Fix.
Methodology, transparency and reproducibility
Examiners expect methods to be described precisely.
- Clear sampling, data-collection, analysis steps and rationale allow verification.
- Where relevant, examiners look for data/code availability statements, repository links, and citations for datasets or software. See Citing Data, Code and Preprints in Dissertations, Essays and Assignments: Modern Best Practices for guidance.
- Use persistent identifiers when possible: Using DOI, ISBN and Persistent Identifiers Correctly in Dissertations, Essays and Assignments.
Ethical compliance and approvals
Ethical documentation is essential.
- Examiners check for ethics-approval statements, participant consent procedures, anonymisation steps and conflict-of-interest disclosures.
- Missing or incomplete ethics documentation often triggers referral to an ethics committee.
Quality of scholarship and engagement with sources
Beyond citation mechanics, examiners evaluate intellectual depth.
- Critical engagement with literature, balanced use of primary and secondary sources, and proper treatment of classic texts are expected. See Dealing with Secondary Sources and Classic Texts in Dissertations, Essays and Assignments: Ethical Referencing.
- For tricky sources, use targeted in-text citation strategies: In-Text Citation Strategies for Complex Sources in Dissertations, Essays and Assignments.
Formatting, presentation and submission requirements
Presentation matters for readability and compliance.
- Examiners check adherence to word limits, structural conventions (abstract, acknowledgements, table of contents), margin/binding rules and file formats.
- Missing declarations (plagiarism certificate, supervisor approval) are common administrative rejection points.
Quick comparison table: Common issues vs examiner expectations vs fixes
| Examiner check | What examiners expect | Action to take |
|---|---|---|
| Similarity level | Low similarity, with properly quoted text | Run pre-submission checks; paraphrase; cite sources; remove boilerplate text |
| Citation consistency | One chosen style applied correctly | Use a reference manager (Zotero/EndNote/Mendeley) and follow style guides |
| Missing data/code | Data availability statement + repository links | Deposit datasets/code; cite them using DOIs |
| Ethical approval | Clear ethics statement and documentation | Obtain/attach IRB approval and consent templates |
| Poor methods description | Replicable, transparent methodology | Add stepwise procedures, instruments and analysis code |
| Reference list errors | Complete, accurate references with DOIs | Use Reference Audit Checklist |
How similarity-detection tools are interpreted
Similarity tools are diagnostic, not verdicts. Examiners:
- Look at the distribution of matches (e.g., methods text may match widely).
- Distinguish quoted material with citation from unattributed copying.
- Expect authors to explain legitimate overlaps (e.g., reused material from a conference paper) and to clarify self-plagiarism.
- False positives occur from references, common phrases, and method descriptions — address these proactively by excluding bibliographies when running checks and annotating the report where necessary.
Dos and don'ts:
- Do run your own similarity check and correct issues.
- Do document any reused text and seek supervisor approval.
- Don’t rely solely on software — human judgement matters.
Preventive best practices (practical checklist)
- Use a reference manager and maintain a synced library: see Reference Management for Dissertations, Essays and Assignments: Zotero, EndNote and Mendeley Compared.
- Follow one citation style consistently: see Mastering Citation Styles….
- Keep a research log (dates, sources, drafts) to demonstrate provenance.
- Pre-check for similarity and correct paraphrasing/quotations.
- Deposit data/code and cite with persistent identifiers: see Using DOI, ISBN and Persistent Identifiers….
- Perform a reference audit before submission: Reference Audit Checklist.
- Proofread formatting and ensure all administrative forms are attached.
Final thoughts
Examiners are looking for a combination of ethical conduct, accurate citation, methodological transparency and scholarly contribution. Addressing institutional policies early in the research process reduces risk, improves credibility, and speeds approval.
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For more guidance on citations and integrity, explore our related articles linked above.