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EthicsNPR revisits 'Cut and paste plagiarism'
MTU to reduce penalty for academic dishonestyMichigan Technical University is considering that the punishment for a second offense of academic dishonesty be changed. The director of student judicial affairs, Patricia Gotschalk, has recommended "the minimum punishment to be a grade reduction in the course instead of automatically failing the course. . . . Gotschalk says some professors may be reluctant to report cases of academic dishonesty if they believe the student's punishment will be too harsh." Increase in cheating @ Oregon attributed to vigilanceAt U of Oregon "reported violations of academic dishonesty have increased 184 percent in the past two years, rising from 57 to 162 incidents." This increase is attributed to a wider participation in "the Student Judicial Affairs process." Plagiarism won't go away in AustraliaPlagiarism, especially among fee-paying international students, still a problem for Australian universities. Alternatives to academic dishonestyRussell Jacoby considers how the "jargon of choice . . . corrodes academic freedom." Turnitin prompts debate @ CMU
At a panel discussion, Central Michigan "students and staff raised questions . . . about the university investing nearly $15,000 for a new service to help prevent plagiarism."
Taking on plagiarism
In Slate an NYU journalism professor describes how he combats student plagiarism.
Academic dishonesty in Korea
"'The most serious problem in our society is a lack of awareness among school authorities of academic dishonesty,’' Oh Young-hee, a psychology professor at Duksung Women’s University in northern Seoul, said in an interview with The Korea Times."
Conceptual plagiarism
A sociology professor at University of Pennsylvania"has accused one of his colleagues of committing 'conceptual plagiarism' in a scandal that has enveloped the department and generated buzz at universities across the country."
Violations of the Honor Code @ Notre Dame
Vice president and associate provost Dennis Jacobs, co-chair of the University Code of Honor Committee, notes that "The vast majority of students found responsible for Honor Code violations at Notre Dameare first-year students or sophomores."
According to Thomas Flint, Faculty Honor Code Officer "about 150 students over the past three years were caught for violating the Honor Code, with less than half of these students found guilty of a major violation." Half of the Honor Code violations involved plagiarism.
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