Reading, Cheating and 'Rithmetic
by Tucker Carlson
Part 2
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[1] Last year a physics professor at the University of Virginia ran 1850 of his
students' papers through a service called Turnitin.com. He came up with
122 cases of plagiarism. Christine Pelton used the same service to catch
the 28 plagiarists in her class. Over the past few years, dozens of
colleges have begun using similar software. But some haven't. Why?
Because policing plagiarism might hurt a cheater's self-esteem
[2] When Columbia considered buying antiplagiarism software, some opposed the
idea. Catching cheaters shouldn't be "a 'hang 'em out to dry' process,
but rather an educational one," said Kathleen McDermott, the associate dean
of academic affairs, in an interview with the Columbia Daily Spectator. Her
colleague Sandra Johnson, the associate dean of student affairs, agreed.
Columbia should deal with cheaters in a more sensitive, enlightened way,
Johnson explained. "When students plagiarize, that usually means there's
something else wrong in their lives that needs dealing with."
[3] What sinister force is driving America's college students to cheat? You
guessed it: professors. When professors fight plagiarism, warned Rebecca
Moore Howard in an op-ed she wrote last year for the Chronicle of Higher
Education, "we risk becoming the enemies rather than the mentors of our
students; we are replacing the student-teacher relationship with the
criminal-police relationship. Worst of all, we risk not recognizing that
our own pedagogy needs reform. Big reform."
[4] As the director of the writing program at Syracuse University, Howard
would, you'd think, abhor plagiarism above all academic sins. Sure, she
feels obliged to say it's wrong to download some else's work in toto. But
in the end, she sounds more like a skillful apologist. In her telling,
students plagiarize not because they're tired ("many of them are working
long hours at outside jobs") and hen-pecked by perfectionist teachers.
"We deprive them," Howard writes, "of a respectful audience if we tear
apart the style, grammar and mechanics of their papers, marking every error
without discussing with them why it matters."
[5] Plagiarists as victims. Teachers as oppressors. It's not your
conventional take on cheating. Not surprisingly, it has been a hit with
many college students, just as it was with the plagiarists at Piper High.
The student newspaper at Stanford ran an editorial attacking the use of
antiplagiarism software as a potential violation of the school's honor
code, which "prohibits professors from taking 'unusual and unreasonable
precautions' in their academic procedures." Moreover, the paper said,
checking for cheating "might even harm the relationship between students
and faculty."
[6] Darcy Jones, a "human performance major" at San Jose State, summed up her
opposition to antiplagiarism programs in this way: "The software is
probably here for the right purpose," she told the student daily, "but it
totally hurts a person's right to choose whether or not they want" to
plagiarize.
[7] A person's right to choose plagiarism. Laugh if you want, but cheating
just may be the next civil right.
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