News:

Happy 20th, FFvT3R!

Main Menu

Despairing for the Species

Started by BentonGrey, May 07, 2010, 08:44:36 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

BentonGrey

As many of you know, I'm an English professor at a community college around here (waiting for my wife to finish her doctorate so I can go on and get my own), and I've been teaching composition 101 lately.  Earlier in the semester I had two students simply copy and paste two different essays off of the internet and turn them in as their own work.  In my undergrad experience, if you were caught plagiarizing, you at least failed the class, and you may have even been thrown out of school.  So, I simply assumed that was the case at my institution.  However, upon talking to my boss, I discovered that most teachers simply failed them for the assignment and let them stay in the class, if they did anything at all.  Talking to my wife, I discovered that this is a pretty common practice, because it can turn into a HUGE headache if the student tries to challenge the accusation.  Still, my boss was extremely supportive, and encouraged me to handle it in any way I saw fit.  So, I failed those two students and gave my classes real fire and brimstone speeches about cheating.

Well, I just caught two more today, both turning in late papers, both copied verbatim from internet sources.  I'm feeling rather disgusted in general that there has been such a preponderance of cheating, and further frustrated because one of the students would easily have passed if he had just written the darn paper himself.  I'm obviously going to fail both of them, but I was just wanting to vent, and also wondering what y'all thought about the practice of going easy on cheaters these days.  Is there anyone else around here in education that has had to deal with this?
God Bless
"If God came down upon me and gave me a wish again, I'd wish to be like Aquaman, 'cause Aquaman can take the pain..." -Ballad of Aquaman
Check out mymods and blog!
https://bentongrey.wordpress.com/

Panther_Gunn

Why bother holding people to standards when we no longer have standards?  Society has become so lax on so many things that I am routinely disgusted and offended.  Every day I see plenty of examples of "floaters" in the gene pool.  I can only wonder just how close we are to collapse, as we've gone too far in the direction of decadence.  Mankind is the only species I know of that *routinely* fouls its own nest, as well as doing its business where it eats (or gets its food from).

Ok, that was my own venting on the subject (loosely).   :P

As some CYA, I'd recommend that you have it plainly stated what the consequences of cheating and plagarism are in your class.  Go over it on the first day of class.  Have it printed on the syllabus.  Post it on any web page your class has.  Make sure you can point to at least two different places it's mentioned so there can be no argument or recourse by them saying "I didn't know".  Too many people will try to get away with whatever they can, and you have to sometimes prepare things for the lowest common denominator.  Sad but true.
The Best There Is At What I Do......when I have the time.

catwhowalksbyhimself

In my college you got a zero on the paper in question, but additional disciplinary action.  Basically you could stay, but had to be near angelic afterward.  It is an old fashioned Christian college so they had rules on everything from what time to went to bed to when and were you chatted with the girls (and chatting was the absolute limit.)

Of course the reality is, those students who cheat are really cheating themselves, since they are basically not learning the material and therefore setting themselves up to be incompetent professionals who never really achieve much of anything and never get anywhere.  It probably won't do much good, but you might want to include that the next time you have to say something on the matter.  If there are in school to actually learn and make something of themselves then cheating is the fastest way possible to become a failure.  At least if you fail a class or test you have to learn the material again later or make it up on some other way, compensating for your lack of learning and thus achieving something worthwhile.
I am the cat that walks by himself, all ways are alike to me.

daglob

I worked at a tech school for awhile. Some students compalined that they didn't get their money's worth out of the school, and some threatend to sue. These students were the ones who came in late, if at all, handed in assingments late, if at all, and insisted that, with the amount they (actually, it was usually their parents) were paying, they should be able to attend school at any time they actually saw fit (sometimes Tuesdays), and do assignments in whatever schedule they wanted (never). When they got a job, they would buckle down and do some REAL work, because that's when it counted. School was nothing. They got mad when they were dropped from enrollment when they missed a total of five days (meaning they failed for the quarter, and had to do it over. I don't remeber how many tardies equalled an absence), because attendence wasn't improtant. They figured that they pay the money, they deserved the diploma.

Many of these students also failed to change the words around on plagarized reports they cut and pasted from the internet. And got mad because they were allowed to use the net for research, so why not just cut and paste?

And if they do finally graduate, they don't want an entry-level job; someone with their skills and intelligence should have a high-level job with an office and a lot of people doing work for them. And lots of money and days off. And if they aren't pulling down six bills by the second week after graduation, well, the school took their money under false pretenses and gave them a shoddy education.

But it comes down to this: far too may of today's students feel they are entitled to a passing grade, a diploma, and an exectuve-level job. Entitled!

Why? Well, their lives are not their fault, so somebody owes them.


Of course, my ex-step-mother feels the same way about money, cars, more money, men, lots more money, fine homes, even more money, and the world at large...

catwhowalksbyhimself

I never thought of it in terms of the entitlement mentality, but you are right.  That's probably exactly where it comes from.

Which makes it sad, because our wealth was built by self-sufficient men and women that were determined to succeed or fail by their own power.  And when they failed, they usually got back up until they finally succeeded.
I am the cat that walks by himself, all ways are alike to me.

John Jr.

I had the same problem many times with my students. Some of them would only print the internet page (even with the address and banners).  The worst case was a kid who copied a book, complete with figures. When I refused the paper and asked him to made one with his own words, his entire family came to defend the quality of his paper and how "hard" he worked. I had to explain what was "plagiarism" to them. :banghead:
I agree with Daglob's analysis, we have a generation of people who believe they are "too special" to work hard. Everyone needs to make them happy, after all they deserve it just for existing.

Stephy Grayson

A English teacher I know was giving a course about "ethics" and the students had to sign up a list of presence. Then he counted the number of students in the room and he had more signatures than students. In a ethics course... He said to them, "You really need an ethics course!"

detourne_me

Maybe Fox News actually had a point in calling Mr. Rogers an "Evil, evil man" by saying that people have too great an idea of self-entitlement now :P
of course not, but I know what you mean.

Plagiarism is rampant in Korea too... at almost all levels of education (I've had to proofread my girlfriend's brother's doctorate work).
One class (a 1st grade middle school class) was given the homework of writing four or five simple past tense sentences that follow a sequence to describe a fairy tale.
Like, "First Goldilocks... Then she .... Finally she ...."

The majority of students had taken something verbatim from the internet (complete with atrocious grammar and spelling mistakes) and copied it by hand... then allowed their peers to copy it too.
out of 11 classes of 40 students, there were about 5 or six original stories per class and 3-4 internet stories that were copied by everyone else.
Thing was - it was probably more work for them to handwrite the monstrosity than it would've been to be original and write VERY simple sentences like I had asked.

Yeah I gave them all sorts of holy hell speeches too, but I also learned my lesson, this year I've got 17 classes of the same grade - no way I'm assigning them that kind of homework.

catwhowalksbyhimself

Which means, of course, that most of them will never really learn to think on their own, because they essentially fight all attempts to teach them to do so. 
I am the cat that walks by himself, all ways are alike to me.

lugaru

And back in the day we used to pass the same notes around saying "make sure you change it" and then 4 people would fail for turning in the exact same paper with the same spelling errors. It was always smarter to just buy the teacher a bottle of pricy booze. Not much has really changed although I don?t know why people always use subjects like this to claim some genetic superiority. Honestly it comes down to kids being spoiled and the education system not being strict enough. Back home we had teachers who would slap the calculator out of your hand or make you double copy all your notes, all the way up to high school.

Benton: I took a class at Umass Boston (I got a translator certificate, hard to tell since I don?t bother with spelling or grammar on forums) and they made me sign a dozen waivers saying that if I plagiarized I would fail and probably be expelled. It felt silly at the time but I'm surprised there are places that are more relaxed.



Tawodi Osdi

The school I attend requires students to read and sign anti-plagiarism documents, but even with that, some people think they are clever enough to get away with it.  I am also amazed at how simplified some of the English rules have gotten.  I am a 40-something returnee trying to recall things I haven't touched in 2 or 3 decades.  I expected for students fresh out HS to have that stuff down, and they don't know hardly anything.

Previsionary

Heh, you don't need to be a returnee to college to realize that people, despite their age, know almost nothing about English grammar. Look at all the common mistakes people make all the time when writing or speaking. It's not something we, as a society, have a great grasp on. I suppose it doesn't help that our rules change every year as our language is very flexible.
Disappear when you least expe--

detourne_me

Tell me about it... I just had the headache of going through the million or so possibilities for the new subjective questions on the English mid-terms.
Try explaining to a 13 year old EFL student how "go to the doctor", "go see a doctor" are ok while "go meet a doctor" or "go to see a doctor" are incorrect.

Do american colleges use turnitin.com ? (i think thast was it.)
It's an anti-plagiarism database the reads your digital files and assigns a percentage of how much of the work is cited, plagiarized etc.
I remember there being a big hoopla about it at my uni, and i didn't have to use it until a few classes in my final year.

BentonGrey

Thanks for the commiseration guys.  It really does seem like most students I come in contact with have a real sense of entitlement.  I really just can't understand their attitudes, but then I was always someone who enjoyed learning on general principle.  I've thought a lot about our culture these last two semesters teaching, and while I couldn't point to one specific thing that we're doing wrong, we are certainly raising these generations to be incredibly and willfully ignorant and apathetic.  The combination of our culture and our education system is not doing these kids any favors, that's for sure.

We've got such a legalistic society that these kids have too easy of a time of making a professor's life difficult if you actually try and discipline them for intellectual theft and dishonesty.  I'm not sure what the answer to this may be, but I do really hate that so many of these people are learning that all they need to do to get ahead in life is be willing to lie, cheat, and steal.
God Bless
"If God came down upon me and gave me a wish again, I'd wish to be like Aquaman, 'cause Aquaman can take the pain..." -Ballad of Aquaman
Check out mymods and blog!
https://bentongrey.wordpress.com/

thalaw2

Wish I had seen this earlier.  I'm an English teacher too, ESL.  Here in China plagiarism is very very high...you may have read about it in recent news.  A lot of good students who I have confronted about it claim that they copied because the sentences were "beautiful" and they could not think of anything more perfect or relevant to say.  So they wanted to share some beautiful sentences with me.  It's touching, but I still give them a 0 and ask them to redo it.  Good students will redo it and others won't. 

Daglob is spot on about students feeling entitlement.  Here it goes from the student all the way up to the family.  If they pay their money they expect a diploma with or without work.  And...if a student does fail there is the option of slipping a little money to someone somewhere (not me) to get a grade change.  Several students come from rich families that just throw money around whenever there is a problem.  I've even heard of cases where students demand their parents send them money or they will never return home.  What's up with that?  My mom would have been like "Don't let the door hit you where the good Lord split you."
革命不会被电视转播

BentonGrey

Good heavens, that's terrible stuff, man.  You know, I was telling some of my students today, there is a difference between accidentally regurgitating someone else's idea or sentence, and turning in an entire paper that you stole from someone else.  Urg.

An update, for those who have been interested in this, the worst of the students I caught cheating is now protesting her grade.  Bring it on, I say.  I'm debating if I should pursue expulsion because she doesn't have the decency to own up to her misdeeds. <_<
God Bless
"If God came down upon me and gave me a wish again, I'd wish to be like Aquaman, 'cause Aquaman can take the pain..." -Ballad of Aquaman
Check out mymods and blog!
https://bentongrey.wordpress.com/

stumpy

Interesting topic. I actually think that, while cheating may be more prevalent now than in years past, it's mostly because it's easier to do than it used to be. In the past, it would have been almost as much work to hunt around (often in a dusty library) for something relevant to copy than to just do the work oneself. The amount of online material, combined with decent search skills, puts a world of temptation at the fingertips of a student who never has to leave the dorm room.

The issue of whether there is more or less of an entitlement mentality these days isn't entirely clear to me because there is sort of a bimodal distribution out there. On the one hand, there are clearly students who think anything requiring effort is a pain the the rump intended to inconvenience them instead of catering to them as they believe they deserve. Any failure is unfair because they haven't been prepared well enough (ironic given how little effort they will put into preparation), or just because expectations are too high. Those kids are in for a rough time when they enter a world where no one cares whether the amount of work necessary to get the job done is fair to them or not.

One the other hand, there also seems to be a pretty large group of highly motivated students who work hard and go the extra mile, often taking on tasks that I never would have at the time. I was an engineering undergrad and then grad student and still have some vantage point on that world. I see students working on after-school projects (solar vehicles, robotics projects, cool software tools, etc.) that won't benefit them directly in terms of grades and, honestly, won't really translate well into r?sum?-filler, either. I think they do it because they have a passion for it and experience a joy in accomplishing something. They may be a smaller group than the entitlement mentality whiners, but I still find them impressive.

BTW, the "entitled" folks apparently don't even see education as part of what I think of as self-improvement. I mean, who would join a gym and then be angry that they didn't get into better shape without doing any work?

Anyway, I think you are doing the right thing, Benton. Students do cheat themselves when they plagiarize, but they are also hurting other students if they are allowed to get away with it, both by potentially affecting grade curves, but also (and more importantly) by de-motivating others who would have done the work and learned something but who see some cheater getting the same grade with no effort.
Courage is knowing it might hurt, and doing it anyway. Stupidity is the same. And that's why life is hard. - Jeremy Goldberg

stumpy

BTW, as a grad student teaching assistant, I had to grade lab reports and homeworks for some engineering classes. I usually put in some effort to make sure students knew how to do the assignments, often writing lengthy notes in the margins outlining the proper approach. Most professors I TAed for were pretty lenient on cheating because they often expected students to work together on assignments. It still irked me, though. On homework where A clearly copied B's work, I sometimes corrected A's papers with comments like, "See B's original homework for further help."  :P
Courage is knowing it might hurt, and doing it anyway. Stupidity is the same. And that's why life is hard. - Jeremy Goldberg

Panther_Gunn

It occurred to me today that part of the problem can be laid back on parents -- not all of them, but enough.  I'm sure it started innocently enough; loving parents who struggled and had to go without certain things when they were growing up, then work hard and try to give their kids everything they need so they don't have to "suffer" through the same hardships.  Without knowing how hard it can be to get some things nor having to work for them, it's very easy for that next generation to feel entitled to being able to get what they want.  

Add on to that their friends seeing what these other kids are getting, they either feel like they need to have those same things to fit in (peer pressure) or just feel that it's not fair that these other kids have these things and they don't.  Other parents are now being pressured/nagged/harrassed/cajoled into providing things for their children that aren't strictly necessary for their proper upbringing, some out of love, some out of a sense of competition (keeping up with the Jonses), and some just because they caved to the incessant whining.  It very quickly gets exponentially out of control.

Is it coincidence that much of this started to manifest about the same time that "child psychology" (I used quotations because while some of it is very valid, I feel there's a lot that's either pure conjecture or plain crap) really started to boom, with Dr. Spock as the most recognized name?  Parents and society were being told to, essentially, remove all of the obvious negative reinforcement types of parenting (punishing, spanking, and in some opinions, loss of priveledges), give the children what they want, and they will grow up to be happy and well adjusted.

I'm not a follower of legal history, but it seems that not long after this (a generation or so?) is when the large uptick in litigation started.  Lawsuits for everything.  More and more scandals being reported -- although it can be argued that may be because there's much more of an eye on things like that than in the 50's and earlier, and more reporting gets done, so more will come to light.

I'm not saying that if we beat our kids then everything will be fine.  What I am saying is that you can't use the same parenting techniques on every child.  Some kids don't respond to spanking.  Some don't respond to losing priveledges.  Some just need to be talked to.  Some need to know that there can be serious negative consequences to their actions.  It's all about moderation, and using the right tool for the job.  Along with rights, kids need to be taught about responsibilities.  I think we do need people that are on the far ends of the view points (liberals and conservatives), to keep an eye on things, but following their views and goals to the letter will only lead to more arguements and false-starts.

I hope I haven't seriously offended anyone with my opinions.  I'm sure there will be people that will completely disagree with me.  If it's felt that this is too far into politics or other forbidden territory, I will gladly self-edit if asked to.  I guess I just had to vent a bit after a Mother's Day weekend of 5 ungrateful step-kids who weren't willing to lift much more than a token finger to show their appreciation, instead staying focused on their own "needs".
The Best There Is At What I Do......when I have the time.

murs47

This is what happens when parents are no longer allowed to spank their children. They grow up to make Benton's life miserable.


Panther_Gunn

Quote from: murs47 on May 11, 2010, 09:33:28 PM
This is what happens when parents are no longer allowed to spank their children. They grow up to make Benton's life miserable.

It's an obvious plot.  I'm sure things will change for the better once he abandons his support for fish boy.
The Best There Is At What I Do......when I have the time.

BentonGrey

Quote from: murs47 on May 11, 2010, 09:33:28 PM
This is what happens when parents are no longer allowed to spank their children. They grow up to make Benton's life miserable.

Absolutely right!  How inconsiderate of their parents.  :D

Quote from: Panther_Gunn on May 11, 2010, 10:02:52 PM
It's an obvious plot.  I'm sure things will change for the better once he abandons his support for fish boy.

Never!  None of your evil commie plots will force me to deny the truth...that Aquaman is awesome! ^_^
God Bless
"If God came down upon me and gave me a wish again, I'd wish to be like Aquaman, 'cause Aquaman can take the pain..." -Ballad of Aquaman
Check out mymods and blog!
https://bentongrey.wordpress.com/

daglob

I didn't mean that there were no motivated students (and I know that no one said that).

The tech school functioned as a junior college, and for a number of reasons, there seemed to be a lot of loafers there.

Generally, there were four kinds of stundent there: Ones that tried in high school, but couldn't get through social studies, PE, or some other subject, and didn't have the grades to go on to college. They hoped that they would get their gradees up enough to do that. Group 2 were "non-traditional" students, those who wanted to learn something to get ahead in their world-better position at work, or better job, something. Group 3 didn't want to have to go to college and take silly stuff like art, english (but they didn't squawk about technical writing), history, or athletics. They wanted to get the training, and get a job, and get out in the world. Unfortunately, the fourth group is the one that made the most noise and they were the ones who were inconvenienced by the rules and work required. These were often people who had blown off high school getting out with the lowest possible grade point average the school system allowed. Some were secure in the knowledge that they could get into papa's alma mater with just a smile and a wink. When the "old school" refused the pleasure of their company, they decided that they would just "hang out" until something broke. Others just saw school as something for suckers. Once it was over, they could sit back and relax until they found what they were looking for.

Then comes the ultimatum: you live in my house and eat my food you are either going to work or go to school.

Some go to work. Some of these develop an intense hate for work, and the unfairness of life. They might go back to school, but they become members of Group 4. Others revel in it, and don't look back. Others go back to school and become Group 2.

The sad thing is, some people confuse a diploma with knowledge. They don't understand that they don't pay money for a diploma, they pay money for an education. The diploma is the proof that they have one.

My supervisor at the tech school (and a friend for over 20 years) says you and lead a student to knowledge, but you can't make him think.

Cyber Burn

I'm working on my Bachelor's, will probably never finish, but I am working on it. I work at a High School as well. I read the syllabus of classes that I attend as well the one's of classes that I have students in. I almost always see a section on cheating. Unfortunately, what I don't see very often, is follow through. It sets a bad precedent in my opinion.

(By no means is this post meant to be seen as teacher bashing, I have mad respect for teachers)

captainspud

At the college I work at, it basically goes:

1st time caught cheating: Prof decides what to do (usually fail the assignment)
2nd time caught cheating: Department chair decides what to do (usually fail the course)
3rd time caught cheating: Dean of students decides what to do (usually expelled)

I'm not sure how strictly it's enforced, though-- my dad briefly taught here, and he got a lot of pushback from his department when he tried to fail a cheater. The student made a stink and the department sided with him.

So, yeah.
I do not hold grudges against those who argue with me. If you disagree with me, it can only be because I have not made the correct understanding clear to you. Thus, your ignorance is my fault, not yours.

Let us work together to correct it.

lugaru

My takes:

1) Mind expanding/altering courses are no longer necesary. Advanced math, etymology, critical analysis, ethics, psychology... I took all that in highschool and it would cause you to have a lot of "oh wow" moments.
2) We have allowed ignorance to become cooler than knowlege. It used to be apathy (not caring) but the greatest form of not caring is not even knowing. Want to be cool? Show how ignorant you are about the subject, like it is so beneath you that you would never bother finding out about it.
3) Everyone else is a genius. It is the flipside... all the uncool people think they are geniuses and are so much better than the "cattle" or "normals" or whatever. I dont know how many dumb kids I've spoken to who think we should prevent dumb people from breeding.
4) Patience. Same argument as the entitlement one. A lot of people know what they want, but they refuse to take steps B through Y to get to Z. I had a roomate who smoked tons of pot and talked about how he was going to be ritch like his parents. You know, ignoring the fact that they studied and worked hard.
5) This country needs to go digital. 1, 10, 100, 1000... those make sense. It is easy to calculate in your head and to visualize. Pounds, gallons, letter grades... they are a mess. I have a soft spot for inches, but that is because I worked in a hardware store for some time.

detourne_me

Did you guys hear about Fox News calling Mr. Rogers an "evil, evil man" for giving these current generations a sense of self-entitlement?

Although I think they are way off-base on who to blame I would say that the concept of self-entitlement people have now will be a major problem once the baby-boomers are all in retirement and the aging populations of developed countries lack a workforce.

It's easy to blame things like child psychology, video games and 24 hour access to entertainment as the root of this evil, but we need to look at how to deal with it.  These things aren't going away.

blah... I'm just rambling...

Panther Gunn, you are right on about the parents "wanting to provide for their kids what they've never had" thing.
Especially in Korea (and I'd assume in China too, thalaw), it's kind of destroying childhood for some people. For example my gf grew up (early childhood) with an outhouse and a bedpan...and she's only 30!  Parents try soooo hard to focus on their child's education that they push the kids too far.
Luckily helicopter parenting here hasn't started involving litigation or legal action towards teachers...yet.

anyway... more rambling... sorry.

Tawodi Osdi

But can you really blame the kids?  I worked as a substitute teacher in the local school system, and I am amazed at the number of what I called virtual orphans, children whose parents were still alive but were being raised by grandparents and such.  If these kids don't think anybody cares, why should they?

BentonGrey

Quote from: Tawodi Osdi on May 12, 2010, 05:38:11 AM
But can you really blame the kids?  I worked as a substitute teacher in the local school system, and I am amazed at the number of what I called virtual orphans, children whose parents were still alive but were being raised by grandparents and such.  If these kids don't think anybody cares, why should they?

Yes. 

Don't get me wrong, the way our culture works and the various things these kids have to deal with often gives them an uphill battle, but we are all responsible for our own actions.  That doesn't mean that these other problems don't need to be solved, but on an individual level, each and every one of these kids is perfectly capable of pulling his or her own weight.  Yeah, some of them have albatrosses around their necks, but everyone's got issues.  The ones who can get over themselves and do the work will get something out of their education, but the only real difference is that they choose to do so.

Daglob, I've become a very big fan of that saying since I've become a teacher.  It is so uttelry, utterly true. 

Good points all around guys, good points.  I agree that the lack of punishment for cheaters is setting some REALLY bad examples, but look at the world we've created.  We've got dishonest businessmen, dishonest politician, and dishonest religious leaders....I wonder if the one influences the other, and if so, which direction that influence travels.
God Bless
"If God came down upon me and gave me a wish again, I'd wish to be like Aquaman, 'cause Aquaman can take the pain..." -Ballad of Aquaman
Check out mymods and blog!
https://bentongrey.wordpress.com/

Mr. Hamrick

Quote from: BentonGrey on May 12, 2010, 05:45:02 AM
Quote from: Tawodi Osdi on May 12, 2010, 05:38:11 AM
But can you really blame the kids?  I worked as a substitute teacher in the local school system, and I am amazed at the number of what I called virtual orphans, children whose parents were still alive but were being raised by grandparents and such.  If these kids don't think anybody cares, why should they?

Yes. 

Don't get me wrong, the way our culture works and the various things these kids have to deal with often gives them an uphill battle, but we are all responsible for our own actions.  That doesn't mean that these other problems don't need to be solved, but on an individual level, each and every one of these kids is perfectly capable of pulling his or her own weight.  Yeah, some of them have albatrosses around their necks, but everyone's got issues.  The ones who can get over themselves and do the work will get something out of their education, but the only real difference is that they choose to do so.

Back up, Benton.  You can only get so far on the "blame the victim" argument before you have to back up.  So, the kids are responsible for being bullied?  The kids are responsible for being beat by their parents?  The kids are responsible for being told by their teachers that they are losers and will never be worth anything in life?  Really?  No, REALLY? 

The problem IS a two way street, Benton.  The culture you speak up hasn't existed since maybe the early 80s and that is being generous.  It's definitely gotten worse in the past fifteen years either way.  I think in part because the kids' have seen "the system" for the failure it is and have given up on it the way it has given up on them. 

And don't feed me any of the predictable arguments.  You can't not fairly and honestly shoulder all the blame on the kids in any possible scenario and claim the system as completely innocent.  And that is not to say that you personally have done anything wrong, Benton.  The way the education system is currently set up, the norm is to treat problems like they don't exist.  The results?  Things like school shootings, children killing themselves because they are being bullied, kids being killed by the bullies, Columbine.  You get the gist. 

In the past, teachers have been instructed to ignore problems as have the staff.  Therefore, a lot of the kids don't really KNOW how to "deal with it" and "get over it".  In a lot of cases, getting over it may not be simple as saying the words.  Get over being bullied in first period but when it happens every period and at lunch that becomes something the kid is not inherently equipped to deal with.  The problem has gotten a bit better but the ramifications of at least a decade of an education system that turned a blind eye to it are still being felt. 

I can rant for hours on this.

Quote from: daglob on May 12, 2010, 02:00:11 AM
My supervisor at the tech school (and a friend for over 20 years) says you and lead a student to knowledge, but you can't make him think.

Quote from: BentonGrey on May 12, 2010, 05:45:02 AM
Daglob, I've become a very big fan of that saying since I've become a teacher.  It is so uttelry, utterly true. 

Good points all around guys, good points.  I agree that the lack of punishment for cheaters is setting some REALLY bad examples, but look at the world we've created.  We've got dishonest businessmen, dishonest politician, and dishonest religious leaders....I wonder if the one influences the other, and if so, which direction that influence travels.

1) I assume that Daglob meant "can lead" and not "and lead" but I digress.
2) Don't forget dishonest teachers and school administrators.  They exist on the high school and college levels and are just as bad of an example.  And dishonest media as well.  As for the direction the influence travels, most of them run parallel to one another.  At best, you could argue that the dishonest academia is the results of the dishonest politician which in turn influenced the dishonest media.  The dishonest businessman is arguably running parallel to that when it's actually a dishonest businessman and not an "alleged dishonest businessman" who is being targeted by the other group.  And the dishonest religious leader is a rarity and not influenced directly by any of the others.

3) As for leading a student to knowledge and making him think.  The past 20-25 years have been spent doing the opposite so why stop now, Daglob.  Oh and then you have one bunch of students who have been to taught to think in such a way that they confuse "thinking and knowledge" with "ethics and morals" and lose sight of all of it.  A lot of the early bunch of those cretins have since been elected to public office.

Quote from: daglob on May 12, 2010, 02:00:11 AM
The tech school functioned as a junior college, and for a number of reasons, there seemed to be a lot of loafers there.

Generally, there were four kinds of stundent there: Ones that tried in high school, but couldn't get through social studies, PE, or some other subject, and didn't have the grades to go on to college. They hoped that they would get their gradees up enough to do that. Group 2 were "non-traditional" students, those who wanted to learn something to get ahead in their world-better position at work, or better job, something. Group 3 didn't want to have to go to college and take silly stuff like art, english (but they didn't squawk about technical writing), history, or athletics. They wanted to get the training, and get a job, and get out in the world. Unfortunately, the fourth group is the one that made the most noise and they were the ones who were inconvenienced by the rules and work required. These were often people who had blown off high school getting out with the lowest possible grade point average the school system allowed. Some were secure in the knowledge that they could get into papa's alma mater with just a smile and a wink. When the "old school" refused the pleasure of their company, they decided that they would just "hang out" until something broke. Others just saw school as something for suckers. Once it was over, they could sit back and relax until they found what they were looking for.

Then comes the ultimatum: you live in my house and eat my food you are either going to work or go to school.  Some go to work. Some of these develop an intense hate for work, and the unfairness of life. They might go back to school, but they become members of Group 4. Others revel in it, and don't look back. Others go back to school and become Group 2.


Is it really fair to group them together?  I mean seriously!  That's about a 1/2 or so of the problem here.  Students get grouped together and then some are written off and some are fed a lot of lies and false hope about what the future holds for them.  Is that really how our education system is suppose to run?   There is a lot I want to say on this but can't because of certain forum rules.  But one of the biggest fallacies of our education system is the inherent grouping of students into "those worth helping", "those who might need helping", "those not worth helping", etc.  And don't tell me it doesn't happen, it does.  I have seen it firsthand.  And that is not even getting into the social cliques.

And people say the kids believe they are entitled to something.  Of course they believe that, many of them were taught to believe it by their teachers.  And even more were taught it by their parents or by the media.  Again, a lot more I want to say here but can't because of certain forum rules.

But honestly, I'm reading through this thread and while the original point about the cheating is wholeheartedly agreed with, there seems to be a lot of "griping about the students" and "blame the students" 100% without any suggestion that there may be something pushing them to that point from your side.  I am not say "you as the individual teacher" but "you as a representative of the system".  And if it is something that was done individually, then was it something you did of your own volition or something that was a result of the way that you were told to do it.