"Classroom Cheats Turn to Computers." "Student Essays on
Internet Offer Challenge to Teachers." "Faking the Grade."
Headlines such as these have been blaring the alarming news of an
epidemic of plagiarism and cheating in American colleges: more than
75 percent of students admit to having cheated; 68 percent admit to
cutting and pasting material from the Internet without citation.
Professors are reminded almost daily that many of today's college
students operate under an entirely new set of assumptions about
originality and ethics. Practices that even a decade ago would have
been regarded almost universally as academically dishonest are now
commonplace.
Is this development an indication of dramatic shifts in
education and the larger culture? In a book that dismisses
hand-wringing in favor of a rich account of how students actually
think and act, Susan D. Blum discovers two cultures that exist,
often uneasily, side by side in the classroom. Relying extensively
on interviews conducted by students with students, My Word presents
the voices of today's young adults as they muse about their daily
activities, their challenges, and the meanings of their college
lives. Outcomes-based secondary education, the steeply rising cost
of college tuition, and an economic climate in which higher
education is valued for its effect on future earnings above all
else.
These factors each have a role to play in explaining why
students might pursue good grades by any means necessary. These
incentives have arisen in the same era as easily accessible ways to
cheat electronically and with almost intolerable pressures that
result in many students being diagnosed as clinically depressed
during their transition from childhood to adulthood. However, Blum
suggests, the real problem of academic dishonesty arises primarily
from a lack of communication between two distinct cultures within
the university setting. On one hand, professors and administrators
regard plagiarism as a serious academic crime, an ethical
transgression, even a sin against an ethos of individualism and
originality. Students, on the other hand, revel in sharing, in
multiplicity, in accomplishment at any cost.
Although this book is unlikely to reassure readers who hope that
increasing rates of plagiarism can be reversed with strongly worded
warnings on the first day of class, My Word opens a dialogue
between professors and their students that may lead to true mutual
comprehension and serve as the basis for an alignment between
student practices and their professors' expectations.
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