0 0 S 0 0 0 M -The.Mih~gr Dily - ededa, aua 4 20 WenedaJauay 4 207Dal COVER STORY The in the next row Could it be that seventy percent of undergraduate college students admit to cheating and 50 percent have cheat- ed on awritten assignment, as reported by a 2005 study by Rutgers University Prof. Don McCabe and the Center For Academic Integrity? Could it be that at the University of Michigan, with its storied history of progressivism, endless accolades and claim to admit only the leaders and best, that out of an undergraduate population of 25,555, 12,778 students have committed an act of serious pla- giarism? According to a number of admin- istrators, professors, lecturers and students, 50 percent is probably not representative of the number of stu- dents who commit serious acts of pla- giarism. At the University, they say, the number is much lower. "Most students act honorably and I think it's a small number that want to do things that are not appropriate," said Esrold Nurse, LSA's assistant dean for student academic affairs. History Prof. Victor Lieberman had similar sentiments. "It's not an issue that really has a lot of currency, it's not a very com- mon problem and it has not taken a great deal of my attention," he said. They may be wrong. It's impossible to know the actual number of students who have pla- giarized, but it's likely more than University professors would like to believe. LEFT BEHIND AT THE FISHBOWL Inan attemptto determine the extent to which University students are plagia- rizing in their written assignments, we consulted the creator of the blog called www.ahfb.blogspot.com. The blog's founder, takes papers left behind on the printers in the Angell Hall Computing Site, also known as the Fishbowl, com- ments on them and posts them to his site. When a regular reader of the Fish- bowl blog found that some information in a paper posted on the site was taken from wikipedia.org, it sparked our curi- osity. We contacted the blog's founder and asked him to look for more exam- ples of plagiarism in the piles of papers he collects. Of the first five papers he examined, two contained sections taken from web- sites that were not cited. In one case, the student's paper reads, "Missouri is a state with a rich history, strong traditions and a bright future. From small communities to large metro- politan areas, Missouri offers a breadth of opportunities for new emerging com- panies." The state of Missouri's tourism website reads, "Missouri is a state with a rich history, strong traditions and a bright future. From small communities to large metropolitan areas, Missouri welcomes millions of visitors each year to discover all of the features that make our state extraordinary." The second example he found was less overt. For an English 225 class, a student took information from a Wikipedia arti- cle on the 1999 Columbine High School shootings, rearranged and reworded it, but failed to cite the source. Two out of five is far from proof, so we submitted 14 papers from the Fishbowl to the website Turnltln.com, which scanned them for plagiarism. At least two contained some elements of plagia- rism. Students took information from a document, either by copying it directly or paraphrasing it, and failed to properly cite the material. This samplingisn't a representative or scientific survey, but it could be indica- tive of a more significant problem pro- fessors aren't noticing. DOCUMENTING THE PROBLEM Part of the problem in determining how often plagiarism occurs is that the University has no uniform policy on how suspected incidents are handled. Such matters are left to each school or college to decide. Some schools and colleges also do not dents innFishbowl printers, were salvaged by a blogger.Some contained suspicious similarities to already published material. How many more are out there? - * , - .. Gm**-vy~mftai * *~5~a aaTa asa e T " Pas THOU SHALT NOT STEAL, BUT WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN TAKING ACTUAL PROPERTY AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY? These papers, left behind by stu- how to use sources or whether they took a shortcut and took material that they knew wasn't theirs," Curzan said. "Thenthere'skind of this middleground - if I've read something in five different places, do I get to count it asa fact or do I still need to cite it? I think those kinds of issues we tend not to see as academic misconduct." Curzan said that for the cases that fall into the middle category, most profes- sors, at least in the English department, will simply try to clear up any confusion the student has about citation. So would the paper we found that bor- rowedliberallyinthe firsttwo sentences fromthe Missouritourismwebsite be an example of punishable academic dishon- esty, or just confusion aboutcitation? Curzan said that although the open- ing sentence is clearly copied word-for- word from the website, she identified the example as falling into this category of "middle ground." Only a sentence and a half was plagiarized, she said, and the information came from an acces- sible tourism website, almost common knowledge. Curzan's analysis of the paper is in line with how the case was actually han- died. After being posted to the Fishbowl website, the paper, written for a class in the Business School, was brought to the attention of Business School Profes- sors Thomas Schreiber, chairman of the school's Community Values Commit- tee, and James Reece, a member of the committee, which deals with issues of academic misconduct at the Business School. "It was our judgment that the informa- tion on the Missouri tourism website con- stituted common knowledge," Reece said. However, Reece said he did give the student a very stern warning about the nature and consequences of academic misconduct. This incident suggests that plagia- rism is not a black-and-white issue. One reason why the number of documented examples at the University remains low is that many cases are probably not determined to be plagiarism. or are never found. DOES A SOLUTION EXIST? AN EDUCA- TIONALAPPROACH With no time or resourc- es to look for plagiarism, no concrete definition and no uniform guidelines for reporting and recording confirmed cases, finding a way to combat plagia- a rism at the University is a daunting task. Many faculty members have started printing a plagiarism policy on their syl- labi, but when asked about the causes of plagiarism, they said it results largely because students don't understand the nuances - and sometimes the funda- mentals - of proper citation. "The very first class we talk quite a bit about the need to cite sources and MLA format," said Suzanne Hancock, a lecturer who teaches English 125. "I think all students understand the idea of intellectual integrity, but the prob- lem is more the nitty-gritty aspects, the mechanics of using quotation marks and parentheticals." Elizabeth Mann, the president of the LSA Student Governinent Honor Coun- cil which works to promote academic integrity on campus, said the council is spearheading a variety of efforts to teach students about citation. Recently, the council put up post- ers in various study rooms on cam- pus with information about citing sources. Additionally, Mann said the council has thought about adding a presentation on citation and academic integrity to freshman orientation, but said it would be logistically difficult to start. Sulzdorf also advocates for a more preventative approach to teaching aca- demic integrity. "Despite the existence of English 125, there are real gaps in students' knowl- edge," Sulzdorf said. "If the University is actually serious. about stopping plagia- rism, they need to get on board a lot ear- lier than when their GSI is sitting there with ared pen." Preventative efforts like posters and presentations might not be enough. LOOKING FOR ANSWERS OUTSIDE OF LSA Some schools at the University have taken a different approach to dealing with plagiarism. Anthony England, See PLAGIARISM, page 6B require faculty members to report cases of plagiarism. Nurse explained that in LSA, faculty members who suspect students of pla- giarism have two options: Choose to deal with the situations on their own or bringthe incidents to the attention of the dean, who then meets with the student and may conduct an investigation. Nurse said faculty members are encouraged to report all incidents of pla- giarism so a record can be kept, even if the dean's office is not directly involved. But he suggested many cases are prob- ably not brought to the attention of his office. In terms of reported cases of cheat- ing in LSA, the majority of which Nurse said are probably cases of plagiarism, the numbers are increasing. In academic year 2005-2006, the most recent year for which data is available, there were 148 reported cases, the year before there were 131, the year before that 122 and the year before that 107.18,482 students were enrolled in LSA for the Fall 2005 semester, consisting of about 72 percent of the University's undergradu- ate population. Nurse, and several faculty members pointed out that cases reported to the dean's office are usually the most egre- gious, consisting of acts of plagiarism that are so pervasive they are easy to spot - usually more obvious than the ones we discovered. A PROBLEM OF RECOGNITION AND MIDDLE GROUND Given that we easily found some sig- nificant examples of plagiarism, how is it that only 148 students out of the more than 18,000 in LSA were referred for having committed an act of academic dishonesty? Asked how they check for plagiarism, many faculty members answered by explaining that the most severe forms are easily recognized. Professors, lecturers and graduate student instructors alike pointed out that to spend time looking for examples of plagiarism in every stu- dent's paper would be impossible, and plagiarism-checking sites like TurnitIn. com haven't quite caught on. "You just can't sit down with every set of papers you have and Google lines from them," GSI Heidi Suzdorf said. "I think that the sort of inadvertent, bor- derline cases are not even recognized by graders. They're just kind of swept under the rug." In addition, different types of plagia- rism are thought about differently. Anne Curzan, director of undergrad- uate and first and second year studies in the English Department, said there are basicallythree levels of plagiarism that a faculty member encounters. "In my experience it usually becomes clear in a conversation with a student whether they are confused about PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY PETER SCHOTTENFELS/Daily