Monday, November 15, 2010

Confessions of an academic mercenary

A fascinating inside look at the shadowy world of the professional term-paper and thesis writer (or, why you should seriously consider taking those college savings and buying yourself some bling and a Mustang or two).

5 comments:

JeffS said...

That is just depressing. Our educational system is bolluxed to the point of collapse.

TimT said...

He says Dickens is a personal model for him, which indicates he perhaps has a capacity for self-delusion as well as a capacity for deluding others. That's a fascinating article, even if the guy comes out of it looking very dodgy.

But hey, maybe now he can concentrate on more socially acceptable forms of lying-through-writing: he could become a speechwriter for a politician, or a gossip columnist, etc...

SwampWoman said...

Cheating was pretty rampant when I was in college; sounds like it is much, MUCH worse now. I always figured that someday somebody somewhere would expect me to actually demonstrate that I could perform in my chosen major and that I could spell it correctly, too.

Yojimbo said...

Before I went to college I couldn't even spell engineer, now I are one.

JorgXMcKie said...

I'm a little suspicious. I typically have 4 undergrad classes with a total of 90 or so students and 2 grad classes with 45 or so students every semester.

Trust me, it's generally not that hard to catch the writing cheaters. I have them write on unusual topics, and I can spot bullshit at 50 paces. Those papers get the supposed writer called in for a 'discussion' of their topic. And I've been known to make them write a page or so by hand in my presence on what they've already written.

If this guy is really getting major work past professors either: a) the profs are incompetent; b) the profs are don't care and are mailing it in; c) the profs aren't really reading the papers, or; d) some combination of the above.

One of my students over the past five years is a grad assistant in the Student Judicial Office. He says I have as many students referred for cheating as any other dozen profs. That's mostly because I push it.

Anyway, I assume a bit gets by me, but not entire works of more than 5 pages. It's not that hard.