Cheating In Our Culture
"Cheating can be defined as deceiving or depriving by trickery, defrauding, misleading, or fooling another." (Cheating in School; Stephen F. Davis, Patrick F. Drinan, and Tricia Bertram Gallant p1). Everyone has cheated at least once in their life. Cheating could be in school, sports, …show more content…
Yes, cheating has appealing short term and one-term benefits. However, if society is given a morality test and people cheat their way through life; whether through the economy, sports, school, or relationships, then they will ultimately fail. Society does not accept cheating even though people cheat. Although this might be confusing to comprehend, it is true. If people continue to go through life "the easy way" they will surely fail and pay the consequences.
Work Cited
Boon, Tommy. “Cheating In Sports.” Cheating In Sports. Professionalization of Exercise Physiology. Web. 09 May 2016
Callahan, David. “The Cheating Culture.” Google Books. Harcourt Inc. Web. 09 May 2016
Chandross, Nancy. “Napster Shut Down.” ABC News. ABC News Network, 2016. Web. 31 May 2016.
Davis, Stephan F., Patrick F. Drinan, and Tricia Bertram Gallant. “Cheating In School.” Google Books Wiley-Blackwell. Web. 09 May 2016
Hoch, Bryan. “Rodriguez Reveals He Cheated, Lied.” Major League Baseball. MLB, 2009. Web. 01 June 2016
Jaffe, David L., MS. “ENGR110/210: Perspectives in Assistive Technology - Academic Cheating Fact Sheet.” ENGR110/210: Perspective in Assistance Technology - Academic Cheating Fact Sheet. Stanford University, 23 Feb. 2016. Web. 01 June 2016.
Vohs, Kathleen D., and Jonathan W. Schooler. “The Value of Believing in Free Will.” The Value of Believing in Free Will. Sage Journals. Wed. 09 May