DN2

When students would rather copy and paste

Share Bookmark Print Rating
By DR FIBIAN LUKALO drflk12@gmail.com
Posted  Sunday, April 29  2012 at  18:00

In Summary

  • The Internet has spawned a culture of plagiarism among university and college students, leaving academicians worried about the fate of learning and the danger the future leaders are exposing themselves to
SHARE THIS STORY

Last month, a university in Hungary stripped the country’s President Pal Schmitt of a doctorate degree after a team of academicians found that he had plagiarised a large chunk of material for a thesis he did 20 years ago on the Olympics.

In a report detailing the matter, the academicians were even more concerned about the failure by the University of Physical Education (UPE) to notice the plagiarism. UPE is now part of Semmelweis University, which revoked the degree.

These concerns, although raised in a distant land, are worth paying attention to.

During a recent discussion in a lounge at a public university, two senior lecturers were heard discussing term papers and theses and the copy-paste culture that students have adopted.

The discussion went something like the excerpt below (we have used fictitious names).

Prof Vera: I am not looking forward to reading the rest of my students’ term papers.

I have already read four identical papers, complete with the commas, full stops, and even errors in content. Everything is copied word for word, and all plagiarised from the same source.

Dr Zeus: That is extremely a poor showing on the students’ part. It means one of them plagiarised the article and the rest simply copied. You know what? It is not only happens among undergraduates, but across all levels.

Prof Vera: True. That reminds me of a Master’s student who handed in her thesis proposal with the Internet links scattered throughout the document. Another student brought in a thesis with acknowledgements addressed to a different university.

Dr Zeus: There are many ways in which other students penetrate the system and present similar work without being caught.

How do we track down 100 essays in the same or similar areas? By the way, don’t you know that there are also bureaus ready to sell whatever students want for their course work?

A Master’s thesis goes for something like Sh30,000, while a doctoral piece is obtainable for between Sh50,000 to Sh100,000. It all depends on what you want and the amount of money you have.

Prof Vera: That sounds like an auction bid.

Dr Zeus: Yes, and much more. All the student needs to do is to attend class, listen out for the assignment, and then rush to one of these bureaus.

Other students simply download material on similar topics and pass it to their classmates for favours.

Prof Vera: So, why do they pay to come to the university, only for someone else to do their work for them?

Is it about a paper degree? What happens if the same student gets a First Class Honours degree and is awarded a scholarship to attend a good university outside Kenya? Will they copy their way through again?

Dr Zeus: I believe plagiarism is thriving in many universities in the world. Perhaps only the mode and levels differ.

1 | 2 Next Page»

                   
 

IN PICTURES: Police thwart mechanics riot

The signatures of British Prime Minister David Cameron (L) and US President Barack Obama are pictured on a patchwork quilt made by students working on a school project about the G8 Summit during a visit by British Prime Minister David Cameron and US President Barack Obama (not shown) at the Enniskillen Integrated Primary School in Enniskillen, Northern Ireland, on June 17, 2013. PHOTO | MATT DUNHAM | AFP

IN PICTURES: The G8 Summit

IN PICTURES: Firearms recovered in terror suspect residence

President Uhuru Kenyatta having some fun with the rugby players after he handed them the national flag at State House, Nairobi on June 14, 2013. Photo/CHRIS OMOLLO

IN PICTURES: Uhuru roots for rugby