Difference between revisions of "Major English Texts II cheating scandal"
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− | The [[2013]] '''Major English Texts II cheating scandal''' involved a lot—a lot—of people cheating | + | The [[2013]] '''Major English Texts II cheating scandal''' involved a lot—a lot—of people cheating in a "notoriously easy" [[English]] class at [[Barnard College]]. Basically, two things were happening: (1) people were using Google to cheat on weekly reading quizzes and (2) students were paying other students to go easy on those quizzes, which were student-graded. And it turned out that, despite occurring in a [[Barnard College]] class most of the cheaters were [[Columbia College]] students. |
− | + | It goes without saying that students shouldn't grade each others' quizzes, [[honor code]] or no. | |
+ | |||
+ | As a result of the cheating, Professor Ellsberg threw out all the quiz grades and added a final worth 70% of a student's grade. | ||
==External Links== | ==External Links== | ||
− | * [http://bwog.com/ | + | * [http://bwog.com/tag/barnard-cheating-scandal/ Full coverage of the scandal] on [[Bwog]] |
− | * [http:// | + | :* [http://bwog.com/2013/05/07/widespread-cheating-scandal-at-barnard/ Bwog's post that broke the news] |
− | * [http://bwog.com/2013/05/08/most-barnard-cheaters-are-actually-columbia-students/ Bwog's revelation via a "source close to Professor Ellsberg" that most of the cheaters were CC students.] | + | :* [http://bwog.com/2013/05/08/most-barnard-cheaters-are-actually-columbia-students/ Bwog's revelation via a "source close to Professor Ellsberg" that most of the cheaters were CC students.] |
+ | * [http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/09/nyregion/at-barnard-college-reports-of-cheating-prompt-changes.html?_r=0 New York Times article on the cheating] | ||
− | [[Category: | + | [[Category:Academic scandals]] |
Latest revision as of 17:53, 8 December 2013
The 2013 Major English Texts II cheating scandal involved a lot—a lot—of people cheating in a "notoriously easy" English class at Barnard College. Basically, two things were happening: (1) people were using Google to cheat on weekly reading quizzes and (2) students were paying other students to go easy on those quizzes, which were student-graded. And it turned out that, despite occurring in a Barnard College class most of the cheaters were Columbia College students.
It goes without saying that students shouldn't grade each others' quizzes, honor code or no.
As a result of the cheating, Professor Ellsberg threw out all the quiz grades and added a final worth 70% of a student's grade.