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Dear Plagiarist

July 2, 2009

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Dear Student,

When you got your paper back with a grade of F for plagiarism, you reacted in predictable fashion -- with indignant denial of any wrongdoing. You claimed “you cited everything” and denied that you had committed intentional plagiarism, or ever would.

This response is all too familiar to an experienced professor. Only once in my three decades of teaching has a student I caught plagiarizing owned up to it right away. And in that case, I believe (perhaps cynically) that she (a graduate student) thought a forthright confession might lead me to lighten the penalty. It didn’t; I failed her for the course and wrote her up. Indeed, I found out later that she had been caught plagiarizing by a colleague the previous term and let off lightly. I suspect that, because too many professors (many of them adjuncts fearful of student backlash) overlook or are unwilling to pursue plagiarism -- the process can be labor intensive, and it is always unpleasant -- cheating has become a way of life for many students, and they are genuinely surprised at being held responsible for it. So I don’t doubt that your shock is real.

When I declined to believe your initial denial, you reiterated it less strongly (“OK, I used SparkNotes, but I reworded everything”) and appealed to me for leniency on various grounds: first, that you didn’t know that paraphrase required documentation; second, that you had in fact read the book you were supposed to be analyzing (Susannah Kaysen’s Girl, Interrupted); and, third, that the low term grade resulting from your F on the paper would cost you your scholarship.

With regard to your first claim, I have to admit that your paraphrase was very thorough, so much so that Turnitin.com, to which you were required to submit your paper for screening, did not lead me to SparkNotes. There were other clues, however: the potted nature of your off-topic observations and, more obviously, your paper’s entire lack of specific page references to your primary source. Also, earlier, less skillful plagiarists had alerted me to the SparkNotes on Girl, Interrupted, so I knew where to look.

Your second claim is also familiar; student plagiarists often claim that they thought documentation is only necessary for quotation. For all I know, this excuse may have worked for them before. But any adequate discussion of plagiarism will correct that misimpression, as I do in course documents you should have read. As a college student, you should know that the key to responsible use of secondary sources is to cite them openly from the get-go and to indicate clearly the boundary between your words, insights, and ideas, and those of your source. But you relied almost entirely on SparkNotes for your observations on Girl, Interrupted.

As for your third ground, you must understand that I cannot take your financial circumstances into account here. In any case, can you see how ironic it is to plead, in effect, that you had to cheat to keep your scholarship?

This brings me to what is, from the professorial point of view, the heart of the matter. Your use of the online “study guide” SparkNotes is a problem not only because it was unacknowledged but also because it entirely short-circuited your thinking process. Such guides very rarely enable students to carry out independent analysis of primary sources; rather, they tend to inhibit or completely block it because they trade in canned, bland summaries and commentary. When they are sound (which isn’t always the case) they may be helpful for quick review of material a student has actually read (as a student I occasionally used them that way myself), but such general-purpose commentary is no substitute for -- or stimulus to -- the kind of analysis and argument that are characteristic of true college writing.

For that, you need to pay close attention to the prompt provided by the assignment. As I say in my handout “Tips on Writing an Academic Essay,” well designed assignments in humanities courses often ask students to think through a general issue in terms of a particular instance of it; ideally, the limited scope of the particular case enables students to address responsibly what would otherwise be an unmanageably broad question.

In this case, you were asked to “discuss Kaysen’s critique of the medical paradigm in her memoir in light of readings about the ongoing revision of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual that suggest that our conception of mental illness is not entirely a function of objective biomedical knowledge but also inevitably conditioned by social, cultural, and moral values.”

You had been prepared for this paper by a sequence of selected reading assignments (for which study questions were provided), directed class discussion, and finally a workshop that walked you through the assignment. Once you consulted SparkNotes, however, you had difficulty focusing on the topic. SparkNotes did not help you analyze the text; it came between you and the text. As a result, you barely discussed the issues involved in the revision of the DSM, and you used the phrase “medical paradigm” exactly once in your entire essay -- in your tacked-on introduction. This flies in the face of my advice that the way to keep your essay on track is to reuse key terms in your topic sentences throughout.

The reason that plagiarism like yours makes professors so sad – and, yes, sometimes mad -- is that it entirely defeats our attempts to educate you. We work hard to put you in a position to reach understandings that you would not otherwise be able to attain. (This is what makes a real course a course.) Cannibalizing a source like SparkNotes is not “extra research” for which you should be lauded (as you claim); on the contrary, it’s a substitute for (and the very antithesis of) the intellectual work that you were asked to do, and which your professors see as being at the heart of a liberal arts education. The opposite of academic honesty is not actually academic dishonesty; it’s dishonesty that is decidedly unacademic. To commit it is to suggest that you don’t understand, or don’t value, the kind of education for which you (or your parents) are paying so much. The problem is not so much rule breaking as point missing.

Disappointedly yours,

Professor Couser

G. Thomas Couser is founding director of disability studies and a professor of English at Hofstra University.

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Comments on Dear Plagiarist

  • Posted by Former Adjunct on July 2, 2009 at 5:15am EDT
  • I failed her for the course and wrote her up. Indeed, I found out later that she had been caught plagiarizing by a colleague the previous term and let off lightly. I suspect that, because too many professors (many of them adjuncts fearful of student backlash) overlook or are unwilling to pursue plagiarism -- the process can be labor intensive, and it is always unpleasant -- cheating has become a way of life for many students, and they are genuinely surprised at being held responsible for it.

    As a former adjunct whose career in academia was effectively ended by the vindictiveness of bitter plagiarists out for revenge after they were caught and reprimanded with failing grades, thank you for noting the dirty little secret everyone knows about but few are willing to discuss publicly.

    I am still very, very angry at the complete lack of back-up I experienced when I did my job as I was instructed by my supervisors. In what Bizarro world do we live where a known cheater can get a degree while an ethical educator gets the axe? No Ph.D. for me, but somewhere out there is an education major who thinks ctrl-c is an effective way you write a research paper.

  • Plagiarism--thanks for a terrific report!
  • Posted by Jan Bone , adjunct faculty/English composition (freshman level) at Roosevelt University and Harper College on July 2, 2009 at 6:30am EDT
  • As an adjunct who taught four courses (2 at each school) in spring 2009 and read four final drafts of essays for two of the courses, plus two 20-page research/documented papers + Annotated Bibliographies for the other two courses--all these are department requirements for the courses--let me applaud the story running on July 2, and give three cheers for its author! I plan to write you offlist later today and ask permission to use this account in the first week of my fall 2009 classes. (I'll also ask Inside Higher Ed). With full acknowledgment credit, naturally.

    I haven't used TurnItIn, as I have some concerns over their keeping student papers, but I've caught some plagiarists during my teaching career, and, like you, have gone the full route internally, following my institution's procedures. About 8-9 years ago, in a graduate course I was teaching, I discovered a paper in which the references had been faked as well as the plagiarism. No question - the school's chief librarian helped me document that I was not mistaken, and I turned the whole matter over to the department chair, who took it up the line. Student was out of her program and the school. What really frosted me was her e-mail to me, "Sorry. I apologize for underestimating your intelligence." Said e-mail didn't sit too well with the reviewing committee...

  • insisting that students learn?
  • Posted by Margaret Campbell , English on July 2, 2009 at 7:15am EDT
  • I'm definitely with Former Adjunct.

    The idea that one could be failed for not thinking through an assignment, that mostly showing up to class, that producing work by rote, isn't sufficient for at least a B, even though they deserve an A, is foreign and shocking to way too many students.

    I had too many students over the years complain vociferously to my bosses. That those who were loudest could get the admin. change the grade for no apparent reason didn't imbue me with a feeling of support.

    I will note that, despite the apparent mass complaints about me and my teaching ("too many students" above), I had many more that specifically sought me out because they believed I would better prepare them to move ahead, whether in academia or outside.

    And I'll freely admit that those students who wanted to learn, wanted to improve, were always my favorites. Shocking, I know.

  • mea culpa on typing without my glasses...
  • Posted by Jan Bone , adjunct faculty, composition at Roosevelt University and Harper College on July 2, 2009 at 7:15am EDT
  • Those research papers (see comment #2 above) - were not 20 pages each...(although they went through rough draft + final draft reading on my part) They were 10-page documented research papers for each student in the two sections of that course. Sorry about that. jan bone 7/2/09. And there were 2 papers required for each student, during the semester.

     

  • It's not all bad, everywhere -- really!
  • Posted by Prof. G. , Assistant Professor at Shenandoah University on July 2, 2009 at 8:00am EDT
  • I have been fortunate to work at two institutions that have backed me up, whenever necessary, on issues of academic dishonesty.

    The first was East Carolina University. ECU kept a legal adviser on campus, to work with faculty and keep the school's academic integrity process running smoothly. In my experience, following her advice reduced the chance of embarrassing and counterproductive appeals.

    The second is Shenandoah University. SU has a fairly new honor code, which most students seem to subscribe to. I'm an academic integrity representative here, which means that I work with a partner (also a faculty member) to "hear" cases brought by other faculty against students. There are several such teams across campus, in each of our constituent schools -- all populated by faculty. Students can appeal from our level to a university honor court, but that hasn't happened with any of my cases (yet).

    I hope that more students come to realize that academia's various integrity enforcement structures aren't in place to "get them," but rather to improve their academic experience. Too many students have become mere information-regurgitation machines -- and that's not what higher-education should be for.

  • Posted by moz , Faculty on July 2, 2009 at 8:30am EDT
  • My spouse lost her adjunct position due to a dispute with a cheating student.  The worst part was that the chair initially encouraged her to fail the student, then backed down and reversed the failing  grade when the parents complained.  Spouse was not renewed and the whole thing was covered up.

    This was at a major public institution on the east coast.  If spouse ever teaches again, and something similar happens, student will probably just pass - its not worth the headache if the institution won't back up their people.

    I am TT at a private institution nearby.  I take great pleasure in rejecting students from this program as I can't trust their GPAs.

  • "But I've never cheated before!"
  • Posted by Steve , College Writing Program at SUNY on July 2, 2009 at 8:45am EDT
  • That's another common defense I've heard, along with "I'm not that kind of a person." But universities themselves have a hand in fostering such illogical thinking, let alone the dishonest behavior it purports to defend, when they court students like customers and promote college as lifestyle. I've had privileged plagiarists take their affronted self-conceptions to department chairs and deans before deigning even to examine the insubstantial paraphrasing I've annotated on their papers and explicated in conference. And those department chairs and deans, operating on the same short-cut socioeconomic assumptions as the students about what's important, have reached similar conclusions about blame, as indicated by one dean's secretary's first question to me while ostensibly investigating one such complex case: "Are you an adjunct?" Without adequately protecting, supporting, and compensating contingent faculty in first-year writing courses, where plagiarism-avoidance skills are taught, American higher ed will continue expecting omelets from eggs still in their shells.

  • Another Tale to Amaze
  • Posted by Brian Bercier , Associate Dean, Graduate & Continuing Education at Fitchburg State College on July 2, 2009 at 9:15am EDT
  • Thank you for putting this problem in such clear perspective. I wonder if all the weight of Western Civilization isn't going to collapse under the misguided notion that "whatever" you do to get ahead is okay, as long as YOU think it's okay. The whole point of a liberal arts education is to enrich life by enabling people to think critically, ask good questions, pursue the truth, and find wisdom and happiness in the process. Too many students, too many citizens, just don't get it.

    One quick tale of cheating for you: a colleague of mine at another institution caught two students who plagiarized their papers. He met with them individually, confronting them with the evidence from Googling key phrases.

    One of them broke down, confessed his sin, and begged for another chance to write the paper honestly (he had been overwhelmed with work and school, and had just taken what he thought would be an easier path). The professor allowed him to write another paper, with a maximum grade of "C", and the student gratefully accepted the offer.

    The second student was "shocked, shocked," that the guy he bought the paper from had gotten it off the web! I kid you not.

  • But that's a great quote!
  • Posted by Faculty Person on July 2, 2009 at 10:45am EDT
  • Jan Bone:

    What really frosted me was her e-mail to me, "Sorry. I apologize for underestimating your intelligence." Said e-mail didn't sit too well with the reviewing committee...
    Don't quite understand why that frosted you. One of the things that really angers me is that plagiarizing students are insulting my intelligence. I think I might have responded with something like "I hope you've learned that faculty are not necessarily stupid." Perhaps she has learned a good lesson.

  • Posted by a WPA on July 2, 2009 at 11:00am EDT
  • Mr. Couser: May I put this article on my course website?

  • You can't be serious!
  • Posted by Charlie , Adjunct on July 2, 2009 at 11:00am EDT
  • I had a student last semester who bought a paper from freeessays.com. She put quotation marks around the entire paper (opened before the first word, closed at last), and then cited freeessays.com as her reference! You can imagine the look of shock when she received a zero on the assignment: "but I cited the whole paper!"
    Ironically, since she technically did cite the paper in proper APA format, the university would not let me write her up for plagiarism! I had to be content with simply giving her a zero on the assignment.

    Thank you for posting this letter! I emailed the link to my students today. It's comforting to know there are others out there who experience the same frustration and sadness with students, and the lack of support from department faculty.

  • proper punishment
  • Posted by John C DuBose , Adjunct professor at College of Charleston on July 2, 2009 at 11:30am EDT
  • It really makes an impression to get up at 2 am in the winter and go out into the snow to see that a student has been drummed out of the Corps of Cadets for lying, stealing, or cheating. The message is clear for the rest of the students. Students caught cheating-when it can clearly be proven-should be thrown out of school.

  • "First-time" offenders
  • Posted by A Prof on July 2, 2009 at 11:45am EDT
  • Almost all students caught cheating claim that it's the first time that they've done it. My university has a policy that requires faculty to submit a letter to the registrar when a student is caught cheating. If it is the first such letter, it remains sealed. If there is a second letter, the student will be brought in front of our Academic Review Board. (That can also happen for a serious first offense.) Unfortunately, the policy doesn't work because many faculty don't write the letters. Instead, they want to handle things themselves or within their own department, so students get multiple opportunities to claim that it was the first time. In addition, we have an Associate Dean who has called up faculty that have submitted letters to ask them if they think that action is the students best interest. That really undermined our academic honesty policy. Hopefully, he has stopped doing it since he was called out on that at a faculty meeting.

  • Not Always
  • Posted by Philogenes on July 2, 2009 at 12:30pm EDT
  • Students don't always claim that they've never plagiarized before; the guy who plagiarized on three consecutive papers in my English 102 class last semester just stared at me.

  • Department support
  • Posted by Meg , Chair, English and Journalism Department at Pima Community College on July 2, 2009 at 1:15pm EDT
  • As a department chair, I always support faculty (adjuncts, too: of course) in instances of plagiarism. But I'm more interested in prevention than in punishment. So we really work with students to understand citation—how and why; the varieties of plagiarism ("But I got it from the Internet! That belongs to everyone!"); real-world consequences; and the nature of true education. (We have a voluntary remediation program for plagiarizing students, featured here a while back, "Traffic School for Plagiarism," whereby students themselves usually arrive at the conclusions about cheating and true education that the excellent "Dear Student" piece describes. I hope that self-examination leads to deeper understanding and change than a lecture.) When I observe a pattern of frequent plagiarism by an individual instructor's students, I do not blame the instructor or let the instructor go—of course not. But I'll work with the instructor on approaches to educating students about plagiarism and on the design of clear and non-generic assignments.

    However we do it, we need to fight the good fight for honesty and integrity and true education.

  • Plagiarism
  • Posted by Mambeaux on July 2, 2009 at 2:00pm EDT
  • A student simply did not understand the concept of "plagiarism" for her on-line class. She did not check her numerous e-mails until near the end of the class and was unaware of her failing grade for several assignments. This discovery provoked numerous phone calls, including several from her irate husband who held a Masters from an African University.

    I was concerned and gave her an incomplete for the course until the matter could be sorted out. For an undergrad at this institution, an incomplete can only be granted if appropriate paperwork is submitted by the student before the incomplete is submitted on-line. She submitted the paperwork; however, it lagged behind in the usual logjam and I received severe criticism from the administration for giving her an incomplete.

    I worked with the student throughout the next semester with stipulations that she attend sessions at the University Writing Center to understand the expectations of academic writing. Her first re-submission was also plagiarized, she still just didn't get it. Throughout this process, it was obvious the public school she attended before registering for a university on-line class did not provide appropriate instruction on what to expect at the university level. I could have written her up and placed a black mark on her academic career, or I could work with her and make an effort unpopular with the administration.

    At the end of the semester, she responded with, "I am happy with the "C." I appreciate all of the hard, extra work that you did for me . . . You are a great, one of a kind instructor. Thank you so much!" I felt I made a difference and my actions on the student's behalf were the result of the hair-splitting decision of whether or not she was aware of what constituted plagiarism. It was a difficult process, but I feel it may be the most dynamic effect I have had on a student.

    Dr. DH

  • Thank you for speaking out
  • Posted by an undergrad on July 2, 2009 at 3:00pm EDT
  • I'm working towards my bachelor's degree by working hard and never cheating or failing to cite sources, which is why I hate it when people get away with plagiarism. Every time a cheater gets through a class, it cheapens my accomplishment in passing. Every time a thief (for that's what a plagiarist really is) is given a degree, it lowers the value of the one I'm trying to earn. I'm very grateful to those professors who aggressively pursue suspected plagiarism, and especially to those who publicly speak out against leniency.

  • Adjuncts at Fault Again?
  • Posted by Liz Hohl , Lecturer at Fairfield University on July 2, 2009 at 5:45pm EDT
  • "... too many professors (many of them adjuncts fearful of student backlash) overlook or are unwilling to pursue plagiarism"

    Your fascinating piece is marred only by an unsubtantiated, "glittering generality" that fails to understand a culture of deception that began long before college. When will we learn to work together instead of blaming the adjunct professorate for everyhing short of global warming?

    EH

    P.S. Yes, as part-timer I have pursued my share of cheaters.

  • Correction
  • Posted by Liz Hohl , Lecturer at Fairfield University on July 2, 2009 at 7:45pm EDT
  • Correction to Adjuncts at Fault Again?:

    "instead of blaming the adjunct professoriate for everything short of global warming"?

  • Thanks for your article
  • Posted by D Scally , Adjunct Professor/ General ED. & World Languages at Art Institute/ Richland College, DAllas , TX on July 3, 2009 at 6:45am EDT
  • I would love to make this article available to my students. I have always had a zero tolerance policy for plagiarism. No leniency. If you cheat on a paper, you are cheating on your professor, your fellow students, and yourself. My classes get both a verbal explanation and a handout on plagiarism that they must sign at the beginning of the semester. The are always amazed when they get caught. I've even had a student say to me,"You mean you actually read the paper?" To avoid the usual denial, I often print out the essay or article they've stolen from and attach it to the paper. Some of them still try to deny it. Life goes on. The small reward of righteousness, along with the looks on their faces keeps me going.

  • Posted on July 3, 2009 at 6:45am EDT
  • In Universities with TAs we often have no power to pursue plagerism if (and when) the professor decides it is too much paperwork to deal with. Many many students who should be sent to honor courts or given F's for the class are let off with no punishment. Eventually TAs just stop reporting, this is a whole additional aspect of the problem not yet addressed.

  • From an I.T. adjunct
  • Posted by Carl on July 3, 2009 at 9:15am EDT
  • This is a problem, starting at the top. Must an incident involving Neal Kinnock, the great UK speaker, be restated? It will NOT stop until leaders develop spines to stop it.

    My experience: a group paper. One kid pretty smart, two lazy Greeks. Clip/paste directly from GM annual report. No effort required to see problem.

    Moral dilemma: either report and get tortured by adminstrators, or let go by. Quick decision: split the baby -- grade 2.0/4.0 and take stiff drink. Recruiters will NOT interview those with low grades.

    Then -- one Greek goes nuts. Puts in grade appeal. Great -- now I've bought a jackpot.

    Outcome: supervising tenured prof told them to go and never come back, "unless they were looking for an F." I received a very gentle reprimand, given a good work record.

    This will NOT stop until leaders develop spines to stop it. And I do not see very many of those types, today.

  • Turnitin
  • Posted by Puffin on July 3, 2009 at 12:15pm EDT
  • Jan Bone writes: "I haven't used TurnItIn, as I have some concerns over their keeping student papers ..."

    I understand the concern ... though sometimes this facet of Turnitin (which helps keep it functional) turns up a darkly hilarious result: I had a student turn in an essay that looked vaguely familiar; when I ran it through, it came back from Turnitin as a straight copy-and-paste from an entire student essay I had received from a different student a year earlier. (Reminder to self: If it looks "vaguely familiar," that's because the fading little gray cells are trying to tell me I've seen this in its entirety before.) The explanation? "It must be coincidence." I gave the student a short lesson on crafting a plausible story and asked her to try again.

  • Blaming adjuncts?
  • Posted by Tom Couser , English at Hofstra on July 3, 2009 at 12:30pm EDT
  • My comment on adjuncts was intended only to reflect my sense that their vulnerability is a strong disincentive to enforcement of standards on academic honesty. Enforcement can be unpleasant and even dangerous. One student swept things off my desk when confronted, then later followed me home and spraypainted my car. Another punched a hole in the wall outside my office when I refused to back down. To be honest, I think that if I did not have the security of tenure (and the backing of administrators), I'd think twice about imposing the penalty I think is deserved. My comment was thus intended to address the reality of the relative powerlessness of adjuncts.

  • Learning Opportunity?!?!?
  • Posted by Former Student - Current Adjunct on July 3, 2009 at 3:30pm EDT
  • While I agree with the premise that plagiarism is an outright assault on the critical thinking process, and that the internet has played a more than sufficient role in the stifling of intellectual curiosity and creativity, i find the majority of the responses to be quite harsh.

    I was caught plagiarizing a paper in graduate school, received the maximum penalty (F for the course and demerit on my University file), and it was probably the best thing that ever happened to me. The fact that the professor was willing to speak with me about her expectations, explain to me why i was wrong, and lay out clear expectations for my future (I was required to retake the course because it was a degree requirement) sincerely helped me to become not only a better and more dedicated student, but also reinforced my initial belief that I was more than capable of excelling at the institution.

    I think far too few professors take the time to really explain from an intellectual standpoint, the damage that plagiarism does not only to the development of the student, but also possibly to their lives and careers. I seldom could think of a more severe punishment than not only getting an F in a course, but having to stay and entire additional year to complete my degree because the course i needed was offered only in the Spring.

    A professor like the author of this piece and like the one who gave me my just punishment are among the few that i have ever seen give proper coverage to what plagiarism is, what their personal philosophy about it is, and what the consequences will be if a student makes a bad decision anyway.

    Nobody is perfect, and plagiarism is reprehensible, but it should be viewed as a launching pad for constructive conversations about how a student can grow as a person and eventually a professional, not simply in a punitive light.

    (I do believe that the indignant and vengeful students with the audacity to claim ignorance or pursue measures against the professor are completely in the wrong.)

  • Response
  • Posted by nv on July 3, 2009 at 6:15pm EDT
  • Thanks for this thoughtful and amusing article - it's amazing how similar the scenario you describe is to a situation that I had a couple of months ago.

    I have an extended response here:

    http://neilverma.net/?p=1358

    Best Wishes, nv

  • Students are students are students!
  • Posted by Pamela Kelly , Senior Lecturer at University of Technology on July 3, 2009 at 8:30pm EDT
  • I'm just requesting permission to use your article with a class of incoming students. The excuses are so similar although our countries are so far apart. I guss students are students everywhere. They always think they ca get away with it. I enjoyed the article and all the comments

  • Yes, scary
  • Posted by Carl on July 4, 2009 at 1:00pm EDT
  • " .. Enforcement can be unpleasant and even dangerous. One student swept things off my desk when confronted, then later followed me home and spraypainted my car. Another punched a hole in the wall outside my office when I refused to back down ..

    Got that right. Think of all the handguns out there. Will body armor for faculty be next?

    As long has cheating at the top is excused -- this will never get better. And it is unfair to students to let them skate by, just to let lazy administrators get their pensions without hard work. Also, employers hate to tell applicants that their intellectual skills are below-average and sub-par.

  • Classroom Use
  • Posted by Tom Couser , Professor of English at Hofstra University on July 4, 2009 at 1:30pm EDT
  • It is fine with me if this essay is used in courses, and the editors have also said it's fine with them.

  • Zero-tolerance adjunct
  • Posted by J.J. on July 5, 2009 at 2:45pm EDT
  • In this vein .. an inspirational story ..

    A fellow heavy-workload PhD student adjunct. Ex-IBMer. Just wanted to get the job done and get out with degree in hand.

    Five-star athlete won't do the work for a services-marketing class. "Dissed" the adjunct. Just a little effort (and a lot less diss) would have gotten the "gentlemen's C" grade.

    Intense meetings. Adjunct will NOT back down on "F" grade. Athlete gets tossed, team suffers. Everyone haunted by all the angst involved.

    To the administrative enabling class, another note of caution. Once, a night student gets reprimanded for privacy violations. Still, student goes on to bigger things.

    That student was Andy Fastow, former chief financial officer of now-defunct Enron, now felon song-bird, whose fast-dealings ruined the retirements of millions of people.

    Standards matter. Rules matter. Ethics matter. In a republican democracy.

  • Its not Watergate
  • Posted by Don Gray , Professor at A Southeastern Universtiy on July 6, 2009 at 10:30am EDT
  • I always find it interesting to read other faculty members comments on plagiarism. One would think that to catch a students folly at plagiarism, no matter the level, is equal to the revelation of Richard Nixon's Watergate.

    I don't support plagiarism, nor am I here to defend the student's behavior of plagiarism, rather to open the thought that there might be alternatives to the predictable gasping of our shock at such behavior and the even more predictable "F". While all of us despise that these conversations even have to take place, why is our only recourse to punish and destroy students for offending our academic morality.

    One of the previous commenters even stated that they took "pleasure" in throwing students out of their program. To which I'd like to ask that faculty member - why are you even teaching? Is this the same standard that we hold ourselves to - in everything? If we get caught do we humbly take the maximum penalty. No, we don't.

    How many us have ever been caught speeding and taken the opportunity to go to traffic court. Even there the judge will usually offer the offender the chance to redeem themselves through traffic school. Imagine that, a chance to take additional tutoring to diminish - not eliminate - the sting of the $256 ticket and those cataclysmic points against your driving record. Weren't you grateful for that opportunity?

    Likewise, shouldn't we be looking to rehabilitate our students from this non-academic behavior? If we were really trying to teach critical thinking, then wouldn't we give them an opportunity to redeem themselves as well. Perhaps a rewrite under strict guidelines for a maximum grade of a "C". Shoulndn't that be our job, our responsibility?

    So go ahead and take your shots - no doubt the responses to these comments will be just as predictable as the "F" for those students.

    Sadly enough, too often the verdict is only "Guilty".
    Court is Adjourned.

  • Predictable?
  • Posted by J.J. on July 6, 2009 at 3:30pm EDT
  • " .. So go ahead and take your shots - no doubt the responses to these comments will be just as predictable as the "F" for those students."

    Written in the predictable style of someone who has never had to tell a young person face-to-face, "your test scores do not match up with your grade point average. We can't hire you. Good luck."

    Not "Watergate." But there are days of reckoning.

  • Plagiarism
  • Posted by Tony Medlin on July 7, 2009 at 1:15pm EDT
  • I followed the course of having a student rework all the assignments to receive a "C" in the class. I quoted her unsolicited email to me in a previous post; however, I have also been in the situation of working with another professor to turn in a student recently paroled for murder. The student was subsequently expelled from the university. It was certainly a worrisome situation. Teachers can be subjected to violent outbursts from unbalanced students and our only guide is our own, on-the-spot, amateur psychological evaluation done on-line, on the phone, or in our office, as to how the student will react. I empathize with those teachers that experienced threats of physical violence for doing their job.
    Dr. DH

  • Posted by Don Gray on July 7, 2009 at 7:00pm EDT
  • So students who plagiarize are now equated with paroled murderers, to be considered unbalanced and violent?? Don't you think that your view of plagiarism might be just a little harsh?

  • Best Plagiarism Story I Have
  • Posted by C. Carmichael , Assistant Professor of English on July 8, 2009 at 5:00am EDT
  • I thought I would share this story with you all and see what you would have done:

    The student was a 60-year-old female returning to school to receive a registered nurse degree after working as a nurse for over thirty-five years. For her research project for a sophomore-level literature course, she turned in an essay about Oscar Wilde (because she knew he was--and is--my favorite). Her source was a copy and paste job from Wilde's personal MySpace page. She copied a bulleted list of his interests--because who would know better than the man himself, right? Aside from the obvious problem of Wilde having been deceased for quite some time before the age of MySpace (or the internet or computers for that matter), she had copied and pasted. She also did not follow the assignment at all.

    The confrontation went like this:

    Student: But Ms. C, I didn't cheat. I swear to you. Why would I lie? I like you. I even used your favorite author.

    Me: I appreciate that you used Oscar Wilde, but you have copied and pasted from his MySpace page. See--these lines are taken word for word from this website. Here's a copy for you to compare.

    Student: Oh, she's gonna get it!

    Me: Who? What are you talking about?

    Student: My daughter! She cheated on this essay. She is going to get a stocking full of switches for Christmas.

    Me: ______, exactly what do you think Santa brings to those who get other people to write their essays for them?

    I wish this weren't true, but sadly, it is. It is even sadder to think that it still took me about thirty minutes and a list of everything wrong with her essay to explain to her that she was the one who was wrong.

  • Posted by Wayne Hames , Student in Business Administration at Colorado Technical University on July 13, 2009 at 12:15am EDT
  • Any first semester student knows that an undocumented paraphrased reference is plagiarism. Plagiarism is theft and should not be tolerated. The degree of penalty should be equal to the crime. If the student openly quoted without referencing, I feel strike one, you're out. But, in the situation of paraphrasing, and as long as the student didn't feel it was common knowledge, a lesser penalty should be imposed. In the case of mistaken plagiarism, I feel a reduced grade would be appropriate. In blatant plagiarism, there is no doubt, automatic failure would be the answer.

  • Worse than Watergate, Don Gray
  • Posted by DFS on July 13, 2009 at 4:15pm EDT
  • I too have taken pleasure at doing my job by defending the integrity of the course.

    What -- and why -- are you teaching?

  • To Don Gray: Consequences matter
  • Posted by SB , Associate Professor on July 28, 2009 at 10:45am EDT
  • You're correct, plagiarism is not as bad as Watergate, but why assume that giving a student an F is automatically a situation where I am "destroying a student for offending my academic morality"? In my classes an F on the paper assignment doesn't destroy the student's grade. It's usually possible to still get a B, if they do excellent work on everything else. However, I don't think an automatic F in the course is automatically a bad thing, either. After all, if the requirements are clearly stated in the syllabus, and are applied fairly to all students it seems to me that this allows us to teach students about consequences, which should be a standard part of anyone's education. As for tutoring to take the "sting" out of a plagiarism charge, I would hope that everyone works with the student to try and understand the problem and avoid repeating. This does require a willingness on the part of the student, which I've often found to be lacking.

    I'm also strongly opposed to the idea of a re-write for a better grade, because that gives students the ability to basically try for plagiarism first, and if they get caught they can still do the assignment. I think that once you cheat on the assignment, you shouldn't be allowed to do it, because you have lost that chance. I've only worked a little outside academia, but when I did so, you didn't get a second chance for a project that was due - it had better be your best work the first time - no "do overs" were allowed, so why should we be teaching students that they are? It's just going to leave them unprepared for the real world.

    I do share your concern about people who seem to enjoy this - academic misconduct cases are some of the most unpleasant things I've had to deal with (and I serve on our school's judicial hearing board, so I've been involved with many types in may roles). The purpose of education should be to make better citizens, and give the student a chance to learn from their mistakes, but we should not be allowing them to avoid consequences, or we are doing them a disservice in the long run.

  • Cheating--by our peers, not our students
  • Posted by Doc , English Instructor at Forsyth Tech on August 2, 2009 at 1:15pm EDT
  • I've just read 3 HigherEd articles and reader comments on plagiarism--the March 2009 on TurnItIn.Com, the Feb. 2009 on the culture of cheating, and this one. Since this is the most current, I'll comment here: See the Jan-Feb. '02 issue of the AAUP's publication Academe, online here: http://www.aaup.org/AAUP/pubsres/academe/2002/JF/. It's free to anyone. The entire issue comprises articles about us--professors--who cheat. In a freshman-comp II class several years ago, I used this as the primary teaching text and sent them to the many Chronicle of Higher Education articles on the same topic. My colleagues inside that department (not where I teach now) were NOT impressed. All those articles were published at about the same time many professional journalists were losing their jobs on much the same grounds--and the colleges and universities were promulagating the pedagogy of "real-world" assignments. What can be more "real-world" than plagiarizing and engaging in many other acts of that thing that some (not all) professors and departments and professions call "intellectual dishonesty"? Why--really, why?--do we (some of us, at least) require that our students make their own sense of what they read and see and do and prove it to us, when many of us don't follow the same guidelines? It helps if each of us answers that question for ourselves, before we try to teach the need for proper citations--and clear thinking--to our students. Finding our own answers and teaching our own classes can be as politically charged in this area as in any other. My biggest ethical problem has been students' paying someone else to write their papers for them--still a major underground business--or parents doing it for nothing. My being creative with the requirements of the writing process has made more positive difference than anything else I've ever done.

  • Even students must beware of classmate plagarism!
  • Posted by Vicki L. , Student at AIU Online on September 2, 2009 at 5:15pm EDT
  • I am currently a student, but as my university requires group projects, and as I am quite often asked to act as team leader, I can feel great empathy for anyone who has needed to deal with a plagarism issue. Whenever I start a new group project, I post a list of rules, a few of which I am posting below:

    1. Any postings without proper APA references and citations cannot be used, and will need to either be rewritten, or it will not be included in the project. Proper APA style includes in-text citations. Remember, if what you write is based on your research, you must use in-text citations, regardless of whether it is a direct quotation or paraphrased in your own words.

    2. If we cannot locate your online references for verification, your assignment cannot be used and you will not be included in the project. Please give exact URLs, not generic links to the site's main page.

    3. Also, your postings should be written in your own words. If I check your reference and see that you have just copied what was written on the website, this again cannot be used and you will not be included in the project.

    Unfortunately, these scare tactics rarely work. I cannot count the number of times I receive a paper with references, but no in-text citations. "I put it in my own words," is usually the excuse. Alas, that is still plagarism!

    The specific incident I wanted to refer to, though, involved a classmate whose Discussion Board postings I had often seen, but whom I had never worked with in a group setting. Having read many of her postings, I was quite convinced that this person was not native to the English language, because of her disjointed and oddly formatted sentances. When she became a team member, however, I learned the truth. Comparing her submission to the original source, I discovered that she was merely rearranging the words in each sentance. The words were still the same, their order had merely been shifted. This explained her seeming inability to write in proper English. She was simply manipulating the text to avoid detection by Turnitin, with no regard to the rules of grammar.

    She did not receive credit on our group project, because I refused to use her submission. It was incredibly difficult, however, for me to tell her this. Despite my disgust and outrage at her none-too-subtle plagarism, it was still uncomfortable to confront her. So for those of you in academia who have to deal with this on a regular basis, you have my sincere sympathy and admiration.

    You also have my assurance that some of us are still using our brains, thinking for ourselves, and doing the right thing.