Quote from: sinenomine on Today at 07:59:39 AMQuote from: mythbuster on Today at 07:40:37 AMSubmitting the same essay for two classes is a violation of our student conduct code here and is considered a form of plagiarism. I would check your university policies. At a minimum, I would suggest adding a clause about this to your syllabus for the future.
My institution has the same policy.
Quote from: mythbuster on Today at 07:40:37 AMSubmitting the same essay for two classes is a violation of our student conduct code here and is considered a form of plagiarism. I would check your university policies. At a minimum, I would suggest adding a clause about this to your syllabus for the future.
Quote from: marshwiggle on Today at 06:20:51 AMQuote from: RatGuy on April 26, 2024, 04:22:45 PMI'd like to bang colleague's head.
Student submits final essay with 98% similarity. Student emails "I matched with myself. I asked my English professor if I could turn in the same paper I wrote for you to him too. He said it was ok." Stu forwards email exchange confirming. The English prof said something like "welp, it looks like you got lucky that the essay you'd write for him works for my prompt. Go ahead. [Ratguy] won't mind."
In what world is this ok?
If he submitted it to you first, so it was "unique" for you, I don't see it matters if someone else accepts it later (knowingly) for something else. If it was submitted to the other person first, then it's a different story. It's hard to tell which is the case, since the match presumably happened just after submission for your course, whereas the other prof's response suggests it was submitted for your course earlier.
Quote from: Hibush on April 26, 2024, 05:52:39 PMQuote from: apl68 on April 26, 2024, 12:38:41 PM]
Were I a graduating senior (or parent of one), I'd be very unhappy with the activists who brought this about.
If I were a parent who had traveled for commencement, I might consider occupying the presidents office (or the SVP of alumni relations and development) in protest of a stupid response to student engagement with the improtant issues of the day.
Quote from: RatGuy on April 26, 2024, 04:22:45 PMI'd like to bang colleague's head.
Student submits final essay with 98% similarity. Student emails "I matched with myself. I asked my English professor if I could turn in the same paper I wrote for you to him too. He said it was ok." Stu forwards email exchange confirming. The English prof said something like "welp, it looks like you got lucky that the essay you'd write for him works for my prompt. Go ahead. [Ratguy] won't mind."
In what world is this ok?
Quote from: Langue_doc on April 26, 2024, 07:14:36 PMTook a detour to a birding hotspot and was rewarded by a sight of more than 200 birds, either nesting or gathering nest materials--snowy egrets, great egrets, glossy ibises, white ibises, yellow-crowned night herons, black-crowned night herons, a couple of little herons, and great blue herons, but mostly egrets and ibises.