Why Shouldn't I Cheat?
There's a moment in Malcolm Gladwell's argument about the rise and fall
of crime rates in New York City where he describes a study that shows
how people's ethics change when they are in a hurry. This isn't just true
for students: the study Gladwell cites concerns practicing seminarians
who, in their hurry to give a lecture of good samaritanism, step over
the homeless people in their way without a word in their rush to get to
the lecture hall on time. This is a useful story to raise in a discussion
of plagiarism, because it confirms our own experiences investigating cases
where students have ended up knowingly handing in work that was not their
own. The most common explanation we receive during these investigations
is that the student "was in a hurry," "ran out of time,"
wasn't thinking because of all the pressure to pass." While there
are, to be sure, those students who knowingly cheat and are indifferent
to possible consequences of their actions, most students who find their
way to our offices and eventually to the Student Judicial Affairs proceedings
are fairly law-abiding citizens who ended up making a bad decision because
they felt pressed for time.
At our university, the consequences for plagiarizing are quite severe,
with penalties ranging from course failure to public service to suspension
from the university and even to, in the most egregious cases, permanent
expulsion. The university takes plagiarism quite seriously, as do we,
though perhaps for slightly different reasons. Our feeling is that the
university is meant to provide you with a place to learn and to acquire
skills you don't already have: in keeping with this, we believe the writing
class is meant to help you acquire the writing skills that are considered
the building blocks of success both inside and outside the academy. And
so, from our perspective, if you knowingly represent the work of another
and get away with it, this isn't a victimless crime carried out against
some faceless institution: what has happened, first and foremost, is that
you have robbed yourself of a valuable part of your own education.
If you're pressed for time, if something has come up at home or at work
that makes it impossible to meet the deadline, or if you just can't understand
the assignment and are afraid that you never will, we recommend that you
talk to your teacher. Perhaps you will get an extension, perhaps you won't,
but the best bet, in the long run, is to not place for educational future
at risk because you have a paper due and you're having trouble finishing
it. This, at any rate, is the significance, we believe, of all the revelations
about TV commentators and best sellers who have been exposed as plagiarists:
the point isn't that everybody cheats; the point is that plagiarism
is now the only intellectual misdeed that everyone still takes
seriously, so seriously in fact that even misdeeds done years in the past
can surface and result in dismissals from work and public embarrassment.
Is it worth it? We've been involved with proceedings where students have
been permanently expelled from the university when they were just three
courses short of graduating; we've been involved in proceedings where
students have had to openly lie in front of their parents and their peers
as the evidence mounted against them; and we've been involved in plenty
of proceedings where the students felt that handing in someone else's
work was no big deal and then were surprised to find themselves with permanent
disciplinary failures of their transcripts and with the daunting task
of trying to figure out how they were going to explain to their parents
that they had been suspended for a semester. So, we know, first hand,
what's on the other side of making the wrong decision when time is short.
You might get away with it, you might not. Either way, you will lose out
in the long run.
So our advice is this. If you are struggling with your writing:
The worst that can happen, if you hand in your own work, is that you
will fail and you will have to take the course again. In other words,
the worst that can happen if you do your own work is that you will be
given another chance to learn and acquire the skills that are required
for academic success. On the other hand, if you do cheat, the best case
scenario is that you get away with it this time and that no one finds
out prior to your graduation or after you've moved on to other things.
Ultimately, the decision is yours alone to make.
Good luck!
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