Tuesday, October 9, 2007

Academic Honesty

Academic honesty is an issue that students deal with everyday. Teachers expect students to do their own work in a timely, responsible, and honest fashion. Although reasonable, it's hardly how students operate. http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&res_dat=xri:pqd&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&genre=article&rft_dat=xri:pqd:did=1341318421 is an interesting source that talks about misconduct involving plagiarism in schools. Plagiarism is basically the calling of someone else's work your own. http://depts.washington.edu/grading/issue1/honesty.htm is another source which tackles plariarism more deeply. One of the biggest problems for students is citing their sources correctly. http://web.grinnell.edu/writinglab/CitationGuides/achondiscuss.html teaches students how to cite sources correctly. http://www.charleslipson.com/Reading-Writing-Plagiarism-and-Academic-Honesty.htm provides students with alternate solutions to avoid plagiarism. Another good source that provides students with way to avoid academic dishonesty is http://www.usc.edu/programs/cet/private/pdfs/teaching_nuggets/academic_dishonesty. There are many reasons why students result to academic dishonesty. The most dominant reason is that they are lazy. They often argue that it's too time consuming, it's easier to just copy someone else's. Another reason is that after a person examines anothers material, they'll think less of their own. So they combine their thoughts with anothers. The best way to avoid academic dishonesty is to simply set goals for yourself. If you have something to work towards that you believe in, you'll work harder. Also, stay motivated. I'm way behind in this class. I have to hurry and do all these posts tonight or I won't pass this class. That's motivation. Motivation and goals will help with academic honesty. Commitment is another good one. If you're not committed, you're less likely to work honestly. That's fact.

No comments: