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I found the description of classes that experience the least amount of cheating revealing "... The best ways to reduce cheating
are all about good teaching." and  "somewhat surprisingly, it is
not the difficulty of the course that predicts in which classes they are
more likely to cheat. Instead, I found that high school students cheat more
when they see the teacher as less fair and caring and when their motivation
in the course is more focused on grades and less on learning and
understanding. 
 
I'm also suprised at how cavalier "cheaters" can be.  I always thought of plagerism and other cheatings as mortal academic sins- I've overheard student discussions about cheating behavior that makes it sound perfectly normal.  Of course these may be the students to whom the GOOD teacher is the one who is easy, "doesn't care" (actual quote) gives no work and has low expectations of the students...
 
-----Original Message-----
From: Teaching Breakfast List [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Nepkie, Janet ([log in to unmask])
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2004 11:29 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Justice or Just Us: What to do About Cheating - Posted to Teaching Breakfast List by Jim Greenberg

For very practical reasons (and others, I'm sure) Paul is absolutely correct in saying we need to report the cheating student to Student Affairs.  But let me also put in a strong plug for calling Mary Logan when you detect cheating.  She's the Director of our Office of Judicial Affairs and she has good advice for ways of dealing with all sorts of student problems.  Her email is [log in to unmask]

Janet