Cheating scandals among some of the nation's best students at
Harvard University and New York City's Stuyvesant High School have
highlighted a problem experts say is widespread. In surveys, a majority
of college and high school students admit to cheating on a test or
written assignment. Some experts blame the cheating culture on cutthroat
competition for college admissions and jobs. The simplicity of copying
from the Internet or cribbing from smartphones makes plagiarism and
cheating easier, teachers say. However, in the case of works of art and
entertainment, some see a refreshing new ethic of sharing and "remixing"
creative material in digital media. Researchers find that cheating
increases when educators "teach to the test" instead of emphasizing
learning. But experts question whether shifting to learning for
learning's sake is realistic when public school funding now depends on
standardized-test results and families think their children's future
depends on high grades. CQ Researcher Plagiarism and Cheating v.23-1 |
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