By Stephen Thomson, The Peak (CUP)
Published: Wednesday, November 6, 2002
Forty-four Simon Fraser University students who committed
plagiarism are now receiving punishment almost one year after being caught.
Students from a business and economics class held last
fall have been suspended for up to four semesters on the recommendation
of the University Board on Student Discipline. Currently, five students
are appealing the decision to the senate committee on disciplinary appeals.
This began last year when the economics department received a warning to keep
their eyes open for similar-looking projects for a BUEC 333 course.
The tip came from a faculty member at the University College of the Fraser
Valley who became concerned when he discovered versions of the completed project
on an employee's computer.
After a large number of suspiciously similar projects were submitted for grading,
an intensive investigation began that involved 47 students, one of whom has
since been exonerated.
The accusations of plagiarism caught a lot of local and national media attention.
At Simon Fraser, the administration became extremely concerned.
"A couple of things happened as a result of this episode, one [of which] was
a renewed attention to the issue of academic dishonesty in courses," Roger Blackman,
acting dean of arts said.
A task force was established by the administration to examine the issue of
academic honesty and integrity, and how to further educate students to avoid
cheating. A report is due this semester.
"That report will help guide us in ways in which we can take a more concerted
approach…and reduce the incidents of academic dishonesty," Blackman said.
Another result of the BUEC 333 case was renewed interest in the university
subscribing to a web-based service called Turnitin.com. The service detects
plagiarism by comparing students' assignments and projects to sources on the
Internet and in its database."
Since the school's subscription to Turnitin.com began in the summer, it has
only been used in a few classes. In each case students have been alerted to
its use in hopes of deterring plagiarism.
"I think if students know that their work is going to
be submitted to Turnitin.com, or a service like that, they are much less
likely to succumb to the temptation to plagiarize," Blackman said. However,
it is yet to be seen if Turnitin.com will catch on.
Computing science instructor Russ Tront has used Turnitin.com in his classes. "I
find it disappointing that even in fourth-year courses people are sometimes
caught cheating," Tront said. He calls the software a deterrent and screening
mechanism. It is a deterrent because students are supposed to be informed on
the course outline, or in the first week of classes, that the service will
be used. However, the instructor maintains that it is not a silver bullet solution
to the problem as it will not catch all kinds of plagiarism. Even if students
are detected by the service, Tront stressed that teachers must still investigate
each individual case for validity.
Although worries about academic dishonesty continue, the situation with the
BUEC 333 students has been resolved.
The hope is that this situation will give students the message that there is
zero tolerance for academic dishonesty, but also that "they will take some
support from this strong action because it must be extremely frustrating for
those honest students to see a small number of fellow students taking an unfair
academic advantage," Blackman said. |