Getting Through College, Thanks To Plagiarism
from the punishment-takes-care-of-itself dept
There have been plenty of stories about college kids cheating by buying or just cutting and pasting complete assignments for their classes, but this BBC piece includes a quote from someone claiming that she basically did that on every paper she's turned in throughout college, and is now using the same cut-and-paste method to finish up her dissertation. Clearly, that's an outlier example, but it does show how far people will go. The article includes lots of quotes from people who complain about the dumbing down of our education system that has allowed this to happen, but I'm not sure that's the case. Kids have always cheated in school. This just makes the process easier. Of course, what they don't mention is that the real punishment is already being handed out to these kids. They're attending (and in many cases paying quite a bit) four years of college and not learning a damn thing, because all they're doing is cutting and pasting.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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No Subject Given
Of course that shit only works for a liberal arts degree. My physics professor told us prophetically "you can cheat all you want in my class, but if you don't understand the physics it won't do you a damn bit of good." He was right.
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Back in the day ...
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It's possible to cheat in Engineering/Physics etc
While you can argue that they are wasting their education, cheaters may also be endangering the public - if they go on to do something like building bridges or designing medical software.
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We have weekly assignments and the teacher put it to us in almost exactly the same way.
"The homework assignments are worth 10% of the final grade. Feel free to cheat and copy others if you wish, I'll never know...but I guarantee that you won't know what hit you when the exam comes"
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So, when will our fossil schools wake up?
I have no patience with the idea that we really need to improve society's morals to fix this problem. The current situation penalizes the honest students! They deserve a break.
- The Precision Blogger
http://precision-blogging.blogspot.com
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Re: Back in the day ...
Do you work for me? Cause I've got a lot of people working for me, and I *swear* that's the only way they made it through computer class...
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Catching plagiarism
I turned in over a quarter of the first class I taught that had a paper assignment. Took a little work but was extremely satisfying to package up incontrovertible evidence for the honor committee. I won every case, leading to reduced grades for all since they were first-time (reported) offenders. Some failed the course since it was a significant part of the grade. Now I have a reputation that I only have to maintain every semester with some vigorous checking.
The tools for plagiarism work both ways.
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Re: Back in the day ...
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Re: Back in the day ...
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Actually, it's....
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Actually, it's Back in the day to cheat in No Sub
There are many things wrong here, but the most obvious one is the ridiculous reliance by teachers on papers that can be cut and pasted. Thats what happens when the school district chooses to use the 60+ year old home economics teacher who didn't have a clue as to how to even turn on a computer to babysit us for a semester instead of actually hiring a teacher.
You'd think that blatant plagarism like this would be even easier to spot than it was thirty years ago when students had to go to term paper mills to get the goods and back then they either had to rewrite them longhand or retype them.
The tools for plagiarism work both ways.
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It can't be that easy....
I expect a lot of this is people selling papers to people who need to get a degree quickly for immigration/visa reasons (so they can become Java programmers).
Don't these cheaters come unstuck when they are working in a job that requires degree-level knowledge, and they don't have a clue? Mind you, these days even secretaries have to have a degree!
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Punishment?
That's the big incentive to cheat. As long as incompetent HR departments use unrealistic standards when judging prospective employees, that incentive will be there. There are other incentives, of course, but I think this is the big one in today's market.
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Getting Through College, Thanks To Plagiarism
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Re: Punishment?
The same applies for certifications. I have seen several cases where a company will only look at people who have a certification in a specific area. Given a choice if you needed to hire a programmer, would you rather hire someone who is not certified but has several years of quality real-world experience, or someone with no experience but who has managed to pass a test?
I have seen several people with certifications who couldn't program their way out of a paper bag, but their company is proud to employ them.
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money issues
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Bravo!
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Math4Money
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