How would students police that, exactly? Could you elaborate?
Also, coordination was tried, like when I made a deal with a friend named Griffin to do a homework exchange, but parents shut that down because that’s considered plagiarism and “cheating is wrong”.
I occasionally did homework swaps, and more often let friends copy off me. Such practices were rampant at my school, and I went to a small nerd high school. Your mistake was letting anyone except the person involved know about the trade.
By policing that, I mean if the students don’t get the graded homework back in 48 hours, they can complain to administrators and parents, who can pressure the teacher. This assumes the administrators decide to make and enforce the 48 hour rule.
Re coordination, I’ve seen kids using “group chat” on Facebook or similar. In some schools (good ones) it seems to be de rigueur.
How would students police that, exactly? Could you elaborate?
Also, coordination was tried, like when I made a deal with a friend named Griffin to do a homework exchange, but parents shut that down because that’s considered plagiarism and “cheating is wrong”.
I occasionally did homework swaps, and more often let friends copy off me. Such practices were rampant at my school, and I went to a small nerd high school. Your mistake was letting anyone except the person involved know about the trade.
Yeah, my high school was a lot of teamwork, and the university even more so.
The right thing to tell the parents is “we are going to learn together”.
“Want to study together? ” was code for “want to split up the problems and copy off each other?”.
By policing that, I mean if the students don’t get the graded homework back in 48 hours, they can complain to administrators and parents, who can pressure the teacher. This assumes the administrators decide to make and enforce the 48 hour rule.
Re coordination, I’ve seen kids using “group chat” on Facebook or similar. In some schools (good ones) it seems to be de rigueur.