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Cheating teens
Teens across the country-and some right here at home-readily
admit they cheat on their homework.
The 2004 Report Card on the Ethics of American Youth, a
bi-annual national survey of students in grades 9 through 12,
reports that more than 62 percent of teens say they cheated on
exams within the year prior to the survey. Eighty-three percent
had copied another's homework and 35 percent passed off
information found on the Internet as their own at least once.
Why teens cheat
Teens justify cheating in many ways. Some of their top
explanations include:
Pressure to perform. As a college
education becomes more and more important for future success,
strong and struggling students alike are getting the message
from lots of sources-family, teachers, college admissions
counselors - that grades do count.
"The pressure to do well is up. The demand to do good is down,
way down, particularly if it's the kind of do-gooding that
doesn't show up on a college application," said Harvard
University professor Dr. Dan Kindlon in a recent article in The
New York Times. Kindlon is also the author of Too Much of a Good
Thing: Raising Children of Character in an Indulgent Age.
Lack of motivation. Teens can fail
to see the connection between what they are learning now and
what they'll be doing five years from now. When the learning
doesn't seem relevant, is repetitive-think memorization of the
periodic table of the elements-or just plain "boring," teens can
feel justified in getting through it in the quickest way
possible. This can mean sharing work with friends and finding
ways to cheat during exams.
"Everybody else is doing it." During the teen years, peer
pressure can be intense. Wanting to measure up and fit in can
often sway even the most ethical kids to do things they know are
wrong. And honest students who don't cheat might fear getting
lower grades than their peers who do.
Cheating goes high-tech
Crib notes written on hands and cheat sheets sticking from the
top of binders are so "old school" compared to the technology
many teens now use to cheat at school.
The Internet has made researching topics much easier for
students, and there are many legitimate online study aids such
as Sparknotes and CliffNotes that can give students a leg up
academically.
However, the Internet has also made it faster and simpler for
students to plagiarize (e.g., copy what they find when
researching online into a research paper, and then pass it off
as their own.) Computer-based instant messaging (IM) and cell
phone's text messaging also make it possible for students to
privately "collaborate" with friends on school work-even tests-
that they should be completing on their own.
Helping stem the cheating trend:
What families can do
Despite teens' admissions about cheating, the majority of the
24,763 students surveyed for the recent Report Card on the
Ethics of American Youth, gave themselves high marks for
character-74 percent said their own ethics were better than
those of their peers. And almost all-98 percent-said that
honesty, ethics and good character are very important personal
traits.
Though this inconsistency might seem puzzling, researchers say
that many kids view cheating as a necessary evil. After all,
many of the successful-and high-paid-giants of sports, business,
politics and entertainment have gotten where they are by bending
the rules (a.k.a. cheating). And often, kids convince themselves
that if they aren't caught cheating, then it isn't wrong.
So what can you as a parent do to
discourage your teen from cheating? Here are some ideas:
Talk with your teens about cheating in a non-confrontational way
(e.g., starting the conversation with a line like "Hey, I just
read some overwhelming statistics about teens and cheating" vs.
"Have you ever cheated with your schoolwork?") Popular movies
and news reports that feature those who cheat can help spark a
conversation. Let teens know you understand there can be a lot
of pressure to perform well at school, and that the temptation
to get through by cheating might be powerful. But also let them
know that you believe cheating is wrong, that it short-changes
them academically and is not the way you want them to achieve
school success.
Frequently check the Internet bookmarks/search history on your
family computer. There are hundreds of Web sites that offer
access to term papers and other research papers, including
Cheater.com, CheatHouse.com and Ezwrite.com among others. If you
find that someone in your family has been visiting these types
of sites, determine who it was and then ask why. This lets kids
know that you are keeping track and that you care about what
they see and do online. For more information on plagiarism and
the Internet, link to
http://www.plagiarized.com/
Familiarize yourself with the school district's policy on
cheating and the laws regarding plagiarizing and copyright
infringement. Sometimes the threat of being found out, having to
pay fines and possibly even serve jail time are enough to keep
teens on the straight and narrow.
For permission to
reprint this article, please contact the Capital Region BOCES
Communications Service by emailing us at
dbushsuf@gw.neric.org
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