Students are paying agencies to write their essays. Julia Molinari asks whether it can ever be considered ethical – and what universities can do to detect and stop it
By Julia Molinari
Guardian Professional, Thursday 3 April 2014
If you Google "academic proofreading," you will see a list of sites
offering to "proof" your work. What they are also offering, however, is
to write your assignments for you. How do I know this? There are two
main reasons.
The first is that I occasionally assess ghost texts: I teach English for Academic Purposes (EAP). Where I work, students
don't sit traditional exams. Instead, they write research papers and at
the end of the process (which we scaffold), they sit a viva voce exam
to extend and defend their research. Both the paper and the viva are
assessed. This, we believe, provides several opportunities to get to
know the writers and their texts. In the end, we are reasonably
confident that final papers are genuine.
Now and then,
however, a student will submit a piece of beautifully polished and
referenced work that is clearly at odds with evidence from our
day-to-day interactions. It is usually sufficiently and artfully
peppered with inaccuracies to be attributable to a novice writer, but we
know it is not the student's work. When a piece of work is plagiarised,
we can usually prove it – but in cases where the student has paid
someone else to write the piece, we can't.
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