So I'm writing an article for the Chronicle of Higher Education (a journal for educators) about my experiences with people cheating in class.
While I don't want to generalize, I have seen far more incidents of cheating in my engineering classes than I have seen in my physics classes.
For the article, I want to focus about what can be done in the classroom.
I'm curious as to what you all think about this issue and what you have experienced.
Senior Design was known as the "gauntlet," not necessarily due to the actual building of something, but for the 100-page research paper that they required. They assumed that if each member of the team writes about 25 pages, then they must understand the underlying concepts.
This didn't affect me as much as it did my team. As you can tell, my long-windedness knows no bounds when behind a keyboard. My team however had the collective grammatical know-how of [insert punchline here].
It was my job to proofread the paper. It was straight copy and paste. Utter bullshit.
And I understand that it was my ethical obligation to correct this, if not report it. But it was clearly stated at the beginning of the class: "if one fails, you all fail." I was not prepared to deal with that. So I compromised my standards and just finished the assignment.
I knew that there wouldn't be repercussions; all they do is count the number of pages, make sure there isn't too much whitespace, and that there's no more than 50% of space devoted to pictures.
What can be done? With this particular example there was a large discrepancy with the overall goals that should have been, the goals that were, and the metrics that they measured it.