JAMES DICKSON: WHY NICE IS OVERRATED OPINION, PAGE 4 HENSICK SNUBBEDCHEADLE CARRIES 'REIGN OVER ME' ° ~ COLVIN: TJ. DESERVED HOBEY BAKER SPOT SPORTS, PAGE 8 ARTS, PAGE 5 tce idt an aIVy (.NE.-*[-UI.?NDR ED->,,'.'.)SEVEINT FN CE R FE IORA R EO Ann Arbor, Michigan www.michigandaily.com Friday, March 30, 2007 A VIEW FROM THE BELLS ACADEMIC ETHICS Engin school confronts cheating BENJI DELL/Daily University alum Steven Ball plays the carillon in North Campus's Lurie Tower in celebration of the opening of the new Arthur Miller Theatre, part of the Walgreen Cen- ter. Ball is a teacher in the University's carillon program. Twenty-five students are enrolled in the program, the first of its kind in the country and the only to offer a mas- ters degree in the carillon. A master's in Study: 88 percent of engineers cheated By ARIKIA MILLIKAN Daily StaffReporter When students in the College of Engineering finish an exam, they are required to write out the Uni- versity honor code. They sign their name to pledge that they didn't cheat. But accord- ing to a new study, more than a third of them are lying. In the Col- lege of Engineering, cheating on exams is particularly easy, espe- cially if the people you're taking the exam with don't mind - tests there aren't proctored. More than 50 engineering pro- fessors gathered in the Lurie Engi- neering Center Wednesday to learn why their students seem to be cheating at an alarming rate. Cindy Finelli, the managing director of the Center for Research on Learning and Teaching's branch on North Campus, presented data from seven years of research and showed videos from ABC's Prime- time at the conference to show professors that cheating is a wide- spread problem in pre-professional colleges like business and engineer- ing moreso than in humanities and sciences. Inone sample ofengineeringstu- dents at the University, 88 percent admitted to cheating at some point during their college careers. David Munson, dean of the Col- lege of Engineering, said he found it interesting that students in some schools and colleges are more likely to cheat than students in others. "Sometimes I think our students at the freshman and sophomore level might be concerned with grades at the expense of learning," Munson said. Engineering junior Scott Allen said he found Finelli's presenta- tion shocking. "I've never cheated in a class, nor have I observed any cheating during an exam," he said. Other students weren't the least bit surprised. One mechanical engineering student - who said she prefers to remain anonymous because she doesn't want to be ostracized by fellow students - said she was the victim of an elaborate cheat- ing operation during a final exam. A group of students in the exam room, which had no proctor, copied her answers on the test and passed their exams around to one another, she said. The Engineering Honor Council - which looks into alleged viola- tions of the honor code - investi- gated the case. Some ofthe students accused of cheating were expelled. But the first-time offenders in the group were put on academic proba- tion and allowed to remain in the college. "It's really discouraging because they're here and there's no reason they should be," the student said. Engineering alum Amanda Kirsch said one of her professors had to change the way she collected tests because students were copy- ing answers on the way to hand them in. Engineering junior Chris Van Deusen, who serves on the Honor Council, said he heard that one engineering student ripped the cover off her blue book and stapled it to another student's exam. See CHEATING, page 3 School of Information creates graduate program to study networking sites By EMILY BARTON DailyStaffReporter Sameer Halai, a student in the School of Information, said he checks his Facebook.com account between seven and eight times each day. Halaiis afirst-yeargraduatestu- dent who plans to join the School of Information's social computing program. For Halai, Facebook isn't just a way to keep in touch with friends. It's also his homework. With social networking websites like Facebook, myspace.com and secondlife.com growing in popu- larity, the School of Information has created a master's program in social computing for students to study the social impact and tech- nological design of the sites. The University is one of the first colleges in the country to create such a program. Students in the program will study the social trends that have led to the popularity of the web- sites, their design features and what makes them successful, said Judy Lawson, the School of Infor- mation's director of academic ser- vices. School of Information prof. Paul Resnick said the School of Infor- mation is trying to create an inter- disciplinary undergraduate major that would include social comput- ing. Although no official announce- ment has been made, the school hopes to have a program ready by fall of 2008, he said. The school already offers sever- al classes about social computing, Lawson said. "We feel like it's an important statement," she said. "It exempli- fies the school as being out on the forefront." Halai said he's interested in learning how people use the Inter- net to express themselves and interact in part because of the differences he sees between com- munities in India and the United States. Halai was raised in India where community is based largely on family and religious beliefs, he said. American society is becoming increasingly centered on online communities, he said. Halai said social networking sites are important to understand because an increase in online com- See SOCIAL SITES, page 7 SWEATSHOPS WASHTENAW WIRELESS By end of year, expect wireless BENJI0DELL/Daily Union organizer Yenny Perez talks about her experience at the BJ & B baseball cap factory in the Dominican Republic. The event was sponsored by Students Organizing for Labor and Economic Equality. Dominican worker tells tale Pilot program underway; University system won't be replaced By KATHERINE MITCHELL Daily StaffReporter Bytheendoftheyear,AnnArbor residents will be able to walk out- side, boot up their computers and log onto the Internet for free. Wireless Washtenaw, a $26- million project that would give a free wireless Internet to all of Washtenaw County, came closer to completion this month as 20/20 Communications, the project's Internet service provider, finished testing wireless networks in three cities - Saline, Manchester and Ann Arbor. The wireless signal is designed not to be available indoors, though. Although the wireless signal might penetrate some buildings, it won't be strong enough to be used inside most buildings, said Andy Palms, the University's informa- tion technology communications director. Technicians need to make sure that the wireless network doesn't interfere with existing wireless networks before the company can launch the service, said Dan Skratek, Wireless Washtenaw project manager from 20/20. Key: University of Michigan campus Network range _ N s (/ K N Huron St. William St. WIRELESS WEB Wireless Washtenaw coverage areas currently running as part of the plan's pilot program A d8 St' Madison SOr SOLE hosts union organizer in sweatshop push By KELLY FRASER Daily News Editor Yenny Perez stood quietly in front of a group of students yester- day morningin the Michigan Union as a translator related her experi- ence working in a garment factory in the Dominican Republic. Perez, age 31, who said she sewed hats in the BJ&B baseball cap fac- tory in the Dominican Republic until it closed in February, briefly told the group of 20 students about her experience trying to establish a union in the factory. Students Organizing for Labor and Economic Equality arranged the event, which was held in the Parker Room of the Union, as part of its continuing Sweatfree campaign to pressure the University to agree to abide by the Designated Suppliers Program. The program, developed by the Workers Rights Consortium, would required the University to only purchase apparel from suppli- ers that allow union representation of workers and pay a living wage See SOLE, page 7 The company aims to go live with limited wireless service by May or June. James McFarlane, a project manager of Wireless Washtenaw, said the company is now looking for buildings and towers at least 80 feet high throughout the coun- ty it can use as mounting points for wireless transmitters. But some municipalities - par- ticularly those in rural areas - don't have obvious places for transmitters. Although that has posed a prob- lem for the company, McFarlane said he expects service tobe avail- able throughout the county by the end of the year. Skratek said existing wireless providers could be concerned about service interference because they want their signals to remain dominant. Washtenaw County's agreement with 20/20 stipulates that the wireless signal will not penetrate more than a few feet into buildings, Skratek said. Although 20/20 and the Univer- sity are still discussing who will provide wireless to campus out- door areas - like the Diag - not currently serviced by University wireless, the University's exist- ing wireless network will not be replaced, Palms said. The Ann Arbor area pilot group included some areas of campus. There are now wireless transmit- ters at intersections on State Street between South University Avenue and Huron Street. Because the technology has not been launched, though, only stu- See WIRELESS, page 3 TODAY'S HI: 61 WEATHER LO: 36 HAVE A NEWS TIP? Call 734-763-2459 or e-mail news@michgandaily.com and let us know. ON THE DAILY'S BLOGS When a good radio station goes bad MICHIGAN DAILY.COM/THECIRCUIT INDEX NEWS....... 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