Tuesday, April 25, 2006

30-70% of university students are cheaters?!

I was listening to Ottawa Citizen journalist Ron Corbett this afternoon as he filled in for Michael Harris on CFRA-AM radio. His topic of discussion came from an article written by Harry Bruce from the Halifax Chronicle Herald where he quotes from a study authored by the Dalhousie University senate's ad hoc committee on plagiarism.

The report stated that 30% of undergraduate students "committed acts of plagiarism" over a three year period. The committee further speculated that due to the "limitations of an online survey" the number of students cheating on assignments might actually be as high as 70%.

Have I been naive throughout my lengthy university career? I was pretty much a full-time student for two years before beginning what would become (I hope!) a long and successful career in not-for-profit agency management. Not once did I ever contemplate stealing an essay from a website (though the Internet wasn't quite what it is today back in 1994-95!!) Even in my most recent class, the professor started the year off warning students that if they were found guilty of plagiarism, they would be tossed out of the class and the department. I can't remember if he mentioned that expulsion from the school was a possibility. Needless to say, even if the thought had crossed my mind this past semester, I wouldn't have had the guts to even try!

Never once have I met a student who claimed - never mind actually succeeded - to submit a project that wasn't his or her own. Perhaps I just don't associate with those people by sheer luck... I don't know. I know that taking single classes doesn't give me much of chance to get to know my classmates, but can't you just tell a cheater by looking at him?!

Having had a chance to speak to someone who graduated from Carleton University almost fifty years ago and to another recent University of Ottawa graduate, I see that my surprise at this news is somewhat unique. I was told earlier today that the Carleton journalism student mentioned above has had a past classmate or two admit to her that they copied at least 50% of thesis projects!!! Decades later! I'd figure that this is something you would take to the grave, not boast about it at a thirtieth reunion. And my fiancee who graduated in December seems to believe that this is a problem that is running rampant across campuses everywhere. Where have I been?

Finally, I cannot understand how the administration of Mount Saint Vincent University who bowed under the pressure of its student union who complained that the software used to detect cheaters was an invasion of privacy and that use of the software fostered a culture of suspicion and distrust. What?! That's like the cocaine dealer complaining to the Attorney General in the US about the police officer who arrested him after a deal gone bad. You shouldn't have sold coke to the cop, moron!

For several years I have questioned the value of a university degree. As I've told family and friends, I am on a circuitous journey that will end some day with my graduation from the University of Ottawa. Yes, I started in 1994 but I am now in my eleventh year with my current employer and the sky seems to be the limit. Along the journey I have taken some classes that have proven to be useful in the so-called "real world" I have worked in since I was eight years old in 1983. Most, in my opinion, have not. I realize that universities are there to help students learn "how to think". I thought that the ability to think critically was one of the skills one develops in the halls of higher learning. If that is the case, who in their right mind would try to defend (and condone, perhaps?) the acts of cheaters? And who, in their right mind, would just give in and toss away the software that identifies those who cheat?

If it is indeed true that 30-70% of university students cheat in a three year period and if it is possible that the stats that come from this survey are even remotely applicable at any given university, it makes me think twice and three times about the value of that degree. For those who know and love me, I cannot state more emphatically - I will be putting that degree up on my wall some day. Society demands it and if I am to succeed at running progressively larger organizations in the twenty years to come, I will need it. But until I am shown evidence that this survey is hogwash and that the whole post-secondary education system is not falling into disrepute, I will always look upon my certification as a university graduate with a bit of apprehension.

I can understand (well I can't, but let's pretend for a moment) how allowing children who fail a grade to move forward because holding them back a year will bruise their egos for life. I can understand (same caveat) how playing games that result in winners and losers must be banned from elementary schools because, well, being a loser is politically incorrect. What I can't understand is how scholars and those who came before them can sit there and allow what appears to be an epidemic such as this go out of control.

Maybe I'll picket and protest my own graduation. How many of those present at the ceremony will be guilty of cheating? Between three and seven out of ten, I guess. What are we teaching our young?!?!?!

Source: http://thechronicleherald.ca/NovaScotian/498856.html

Friday, April 21, 2006

Go Sens Go!!!

Here we go again, Sens fans! For years I've been saying "this year's the year" but... well you know how the story ended every one of those years.

Short and sweet - I don't want to be responsible for throwing the team off its tracks, but here's hoping that we've paid our dues as the New Jersey Devils did before winning their Cup back in the 90's. Here's hoping that after toiling in the depths of murky playoff efforts, we rise to the occasions and have cause to celebrate.

I won't be there in person this year, but I will be watching each and every second of all the games. Let's collectively think good thoughts and ignore those naysayer Leafs fans out there!!!

Saturday, April 15, 2006

Where will provincial electricity savings go?

Dalton McGuinty announced earlier this week that Ontario power rates were going up. On April 12, 2006, the Premier stated that "Our generation should pay for the actual cost of electricity we're buying." Earlier in the month, he told reporters that governments had historically shied away from forcing Ontarians to pay the true cost for the utility, and that "The net result was that we have saddled ourselves and our children with billions of dollars in debt accumulated because we didn’t pay the actual cost of electricity.”

Billions of dollars in debt.

I have been unable to nail down the total sum Ontario residents as a whole will see added to their hydro bills. We know the hikes are in the 15% range and that it will cost about $10-20 per month over and above what they were already paying.

So the subsidies are ending. The Ontario government is longer spending money on them. What will it do with its savings? I told a local MPP that this would be a perfect opportunity to announce a rollback of the so-called health premium, offsetting the electricity price hike with what amounts to a tax cut. I was assured that this move by the McGuinty government is not intended on being a "money maker" - somehow I have a hard time believing that.

On top of it all, Ottawans will pay even more due to their municipal utility boosting the 'delivery charge' as well, exposing residents of the Nation's Capital to a double whammy. That's another story for another day. Alex Cullen brought this issue to the forefront earlier this week and I cannot wait to see how the City of Ottawa tries to spin that story. I digress.

So... Jim Watson, Madeleine Meilleur, Richard Patten et al, what's it going to be? We were asked to choose change a while ago. We did, and it's costing us big time right now. Is this Liberal government going to sock the money aside to spend on incentives for Ontarians to vote Liberal again in 2007? I can only hope so at this point. In the meantime, I look at the health tax I have to pay every two weeks and in a month or so, I'll look at my bigger electricity bill.

As I said in a number of places last summer, don't tell me to conserve energy this summer by turning my air conditioning down. Since last summer, dozens of new businesses were built on parking lots and farmers fields in Ottawa. Hundreds if not thousands of homes have popped out of the ground in what used to be rural neighbouring communities. How much additional demand has been put on the grid in the last 12 months? I thought we were trying to conserve electricity, not adding to the demand. All these condo developments in the urban core will add to the strain - so don't blame me and my air conditioners when it's 34 degrees outside in a couple of months. I'll enjoy my comfort - and will pay for it. It's not my fault the grid will be strained - blame the politicians who continue to approve new subdivisions and shopping centres while we supposedly don't have the electricity to power them.

Last time I checked, when General Motors or Toshiba see dramatic increases in demand for their products, they make more. If infrastructure isn't in place to do so, they build new plants. Come on, Ontario - figure it out. Regardless of whether or not those who lived in Ontario in 2005 cut their consumption by 5% or even 15%, any savings will be more than exceeded by the extra demand coming from the new residences and businesses that become occupied each and every day.

Enough with the dancing around... fix it once and for all. If this is the first step, fine. Just tell me it is and I'll stand back and watch while solutions to a chronic problem are put in place.