- A national survey published in Education Week found that 54% of students admitted to plagiarizing from the internet; 74% of the students admitted that at least once during the past school year they had engaged in serious cheating; and 47% of students believe their teachers sometimes choose to ignore students who are cheating.
- A study by The Center for Academic Integrity found that almost 80% of college students admit to cheating at least once.
- According to the Gallup Organization in 2000, the top two problems facing the country today are: 1) Education and 2) Decline in Ethics. Both of these were ranked over crime, poverty, drugs, taxes, guns, environment, and racism.
- A study showed that 55% of faculty would not want to devote any effort on documenting suspected incidents of cheating.
This second website had a lot of information on how technology has increased plagiarism. It stated that "the internet has created new opportunities for students to become better cheaters and as a result created new challenges for educators." Some web sources encourage plagiariam and students can find different ways to copy information from these sources to make it look like they have not been cheating. "Cyber-plagiarism"/"Patchwork-plagiarism" is when information is copied from the internet and put into different areas of a research paper to make it look like your own. Also, students can use a thesaurus and change the words around from something they have copied.
Many colleges and universities are now starting to use online plagiarism services to catch cheaters, such as Turnitin.com and The Internet (Roach). Some of these services are free and some cost quite a bit. The services that are costly are kown to be more powerful because they make their own databases of source material and use a more specific search criteria. In contrast, the services that are free do not take language alterations in account.
These facts really aren't surprising when you think of it. There is a lot of pressure on students and teachers, pressure coming from all directions and when the pressure is on our ethics can come into question.
ReplyDeleteThat stat that 55% of faculty would rather not deal with the cheating is very shocking to me!
ReplyDelete