Stated in “The Myth of Inferiority” by T. Allen Culpepper, students who have hard lives are justified to having late papers, excessive absences, rewrite opportunities, but never plagiarized work. Throughout the article many examples are stated to support why. Students deal with financial instability, cope with economic hardships, and are always competing with obligations between family, work and school.…
-Originally meant that the United States declared itself neutral in European wars and warned other nations to stay out of the Western Hemisphere.…
In The Cheating Culture: Why More Americans Are Doing Wrong To Get Ahead, David Callahan, prime supporter, chief of Manhattan-based open strategy research organization, exhibits how plagiarism has pervaded American life. He clarifies the three incredible powers driving the cheating society, and he doubts whether individuals truly need to live in a society characterized by an array of cheating practices. His message to all students that change is near. He is idealistic about the potential for a more reasonable, fairer society taking into account for the individuals who works hard and think ambitiously. His concrete recommendation for leveling the playing field and opposing the cheating society is a test to college students to become the change you want to see.…
In chapter 1 of Bridging the Gap, the article "Can You Stand the Pressure?" written by Calvin Mackie, describes pressure. The main focus of the article is about pressure, how it is generated, and the positive or negative outcome it can have on a person. The article also provides material on how to handle and deal with it. Mackie provides motivation to people who may be dealing with stress from entering college or finishing college, work related or any pressure one may encounter during life. I believe his purpose of writing this article is to inform people that stress as a factor of life that we must deal with, and depending on how we deal with it, it can cause great achievement or cause one to break down. He gave a clear understanding of how pressure is created by using an analogy, comparing it to a pipe. He illustrated how too much pressure can cause a pipe to crack, just as it can with in a person. I found it interesting that he compared ourselves needing to seek help if we become “cracked” due to too much pressure, as we could seek a plumber to fix a cracked pipe. There are definitely parts of this article that are persuasive such as the instructions he gives towards students stating “if you are flunking calculus, get a tutor.” He becomes very persuasive during the section on how to deal with stress, suggesting to eat healthier, exercise and to seek help when needed. I don’t think he deviates from writing to inform, because the article is solely just that, very…
Hinman, Lawrence M., “How to Fight College Cheating.” Practical Argument: A Text and Anthology. Ed. Laurie G. Kirszner and Stephen R. Mandell. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2011. 297-98. Print.…
Nearly everyone would agree that cheating is wrong. It would be difficult to find anyone who is willing to support the view that cheating is a noble method of getting anything done. The mention of it will bring an uncomfortable uncertainty to any student’s face, and draw a disapproving frown from anyone over thirty. However, in the age of easy internet access, it becomes less clear as to what cheating actually is. The answer to any question you will ever have is readily available at the click of a mouse. Entire essays are ripe for the picking. Delicious fields of all-too-accurate practice tests, ready to be harvested for your ethically questionable feast! Colleen Wenke in the essay, “Too Much Pressure,” asserts cheating to be “taking work done by somebody else, be it a friend or someone that you do not know, and writing your name on it and saying it is your work.” (564) She alleges that there is a new…
Murphy discusses two personal experiences that took place several years apart to demonstrate the long-lasting, irreversible effects of plagiarism, "its perversity" (898). In the first example (the one that took place earlier in time) Murphy is able to locate the book that the student had used to plagiarize his work. When confronted on two different occasions, the student firmly and very convincingly lied about having copied. In the second example, an innocent student, under the pressure of Murphy 's query, confesses to being guilty. When we look closely at Murphy 's anecdotes, we see how challenging it is for a professor to know what the right course of action is when faced with a possible case of plagiarism. According to the author, it is not part of a professor 's training to learn how to handle it and as a result they are not prepared for it.…
“Cheating is taking work done by somebody else […] and saying it is yours.” (Colleen Wenke 532). Through the use of contrast, surveys, credibility, and emotions, Wenke is able to successfully make her claim that cheating will decline only when the need for a grade without the work diminishes and the desire for knowledge is resurrected in a student’s mind.…
Upon analysis it is evident that the two articles relate in various ways, yet both the author’s approaches differ vastly. Both agree that cheating “... is a problem on many college campuses” (Blum 1). Perez-Pena explains, “there is evidence that the problem has worsened over the last few decades”(1). They agree that cheating and plagiarism have become more tolerated by society. Perez-Pena claims, “cheating has become easier and more widely tolerated and both schools and parents have failed…”(1). The ways that colleges handle plagiarism can never be totally successful (Blum 1). Both authors agree that there are multiples causes of the problem including parents, teachers, and technology. In Perez-Pena’s article he states more facts…
Tommy Raskin in Cheating Students (2013) asserts that our schools fail the humanistic vision of education. Tommy supports this assertion by reviewing the 2010 study conducted by Josephson Institute of Ethics that found 59 percent of high school students had cheated on a test in the past year, and over 33 percent had cheated more than twice. Not only does Tommy point out the problem of students cheating, and the pressure that is put on the students to memorize in order to succeed, but he asserts the problem that schools have turned what should be a shared learning endeavor into a ruthless competition. The article “Creative…motivated’ and fired”, found on page 24, where a fifth grade teacher was dismissed because of the highly unusual number of wrong answers that were corrected, is a perfect example of this competition that has become a crisis. The writer concludes that cheating has brought the economy to near ruins, and that the nature of schooling must be altered to make true learning the number one priority. The writer establishes a direct tone to convince his audience of educators that it is vital for humanists to play a leading role in reforming competition based grading that takes the joy out of learning, because it is humanistic values that are at stake in the cheating crisis.…
Chace gives an example of how universities need to look at themselves to fix the problem of cheating in higher education. Chace states, “The most appalling aspect of the rise of cheating on campus in recent times is that some professors themselves have offered sophisticated defenses of plagiarism” (207). Chace then gives the example of a professor supporting plagiarism. Gilbert Larochelle states “Can plagiarism in an intellectual universe where it has become impossible to differentiate the representation from the referent, the copy from the original, and the copyist from the author” (Larochelle 208). This quote is stating it shouldn’t matter if a student cheats, professors can tell regardless. Chace brings up teachers defending plagiarizing to relate to administrators. This relates to administrators because they are the leaders of the staff, and feel responsible for them. Administrators hold professors accountable in the classroom. By using this example he explains how administrators need to do a better job controlling their teaching staff. This brings an emotional tie to the audience. By using Pathos he makes his audience feel responsible for the issues of cheating in universities. This makes the audience look at themselves and their professors and want to do something about it. Chase knows his audience and, because of this, he knows they will take this seriously which will…
The issue of tricking is on a very basic level one of character. Character is most promptly shaped amid times of change, and youthfulness is prime among them. Secondary school and college are, consequently, especially imperative spots for students to discover that when they cheat in their scholastic work, they are not just bamboozling kindred peers and their establishment; they are tricking themselves.…
There are quite a few examples of cheating in this passage. Students say that not being prepared is one reason that people cheat off tests, “ ‘Some kids think that they’re too cool to study, or that they know everything and don’t have to study’... ‘Then when it comes to the test they’re surprised, and try to cheat’”. A second reason stated for student cheating is that they don’t know the boundaries. A professor says, “‘ The internet has made cheating, both easier and its boundaries more ambiguous’”. He goes on to say that this is the biggest reason that some students don’t see a problem to taking a essay directly off of the internet. The final reason given for cheating is the students being afraid to get a bad grade. This is shown all throughout…
Due to the amount of information readily available through websites and online libraries, the problem with plagiarism has become a major ethical issue in today's academic environment. David Callahan, author of Cheating Culture (Macklem, 2006), states "Widespread cheating is undermining some of the most important ideals of American society." With the continuous rise of academic challenges students are pressured more to look towards faster and more convenient ways of research and writing. Conveniently, while students are completing their research, many subjects have topics that represent their thoughts so perfectly that they can not put it in their own words. And instead of taking the effort to word the information…
Parents are often seen as sources of motivation and encouragement to their child's studies in school. However, at present, students feel their parents are major sources of the pressure to cheat. Due to the pressure parents place on their children, students have a hard time controlling their temptation to look at their friend's test or copy down all the homework answers. Parents hold some of the responsibility for their children cheating in school.…