Saturday, November 16, 2013

Getting Away with It

So much for building a (nearly) perfect mousetrap.  Whilst grading a stack of written assignments, I discovered two which were clearly plagiarized.

I’d thought I was being clever with the assignment.  I had become weary of reading atrociously written research papers, so I came up with an alternative: Students were to choose two vocabulary terms from a list of six, define each term, and give a brief example of how the concepts work in real life.  Maximum length: One-and-a-half pages.  Double-spaced.  In 12-point font.

Three of these assignments make up the course writing requirement.  I thought it would preserve a degree of academic rigor for the serious students and prove a doable project for the rest.  The change has worked reasonably well in my classes at Snowflake College, where the students may be snotty, entitled brats but who are nonetheless capable of writing a coherent paper.

It’s been a different story at the school where I moonlight a couple of nights a week.  Verdant Fields Community College is an urban campus in Hickstown, a mid-sized city an hour’s drive from home.  Roughly three-quarters of the students are enrolled, if only nominally, in vocational training programs.  Since the liberal arts course I teach is required for graduation, I have a captive audience.

Verdant Fields' student body is largely made up of folks for whom the American Dream is an ever-elusive mirage.  Too many of them have been unsuccessful in their schooling up to this point, and yet somehow expect community college to be an entirely different experience.  A fair proportion of them suffer from diagnosed learning disabilities.  Many more seem to have undiagnosed learning disabilities.  I suspect a few suffer from some sort of emotional imbalance.

Each semester, I stand in front of a motley assortment of erstwhile high school fuck-ups, heavyset, prematurely aged single moms, inbred trailer park mutts, recovering alcoholics and assorted other species of addict, the occasional paroled felon, and, if the gods are smiling upon me, a handful of aspiring four-year transfer students leavened with the chance “mature” student possessing common sense, intelligence, and life experience.

Effective teaching in such a setting is a challenge for even the most skilled instructor, which I do not claim to be.  I quickly learned that a straight-up lecture class would not work.  The natives got restless pretty quickly.   

And so, I began to employ what the hacks at the teaching and learning center refer to as “active learning” techniques.  What this actually means is that I came up with ways to distract the children so I could teach the real students.   Group work, case studies, and role-playing classroom games have become my survival strategy…and it works!  Not to mention the fact that my student evaluations have improved substantially.  I even got the department’s teaching award last year.  Heck, I’ve had students tell me they chose my class because of my stellar ratings on That Website Which Shall Not Be Named.  (As a matter of principle, I steadfastly refuse to verify this.)

The downside of my new program is that my self-respect has been diminished.  I am fighting to stay afloat in the new educational marketplace where the student customer is king.  Whenever I find myself confronted with dishonest students, I get a sick feeling in the pit of my stomach.  It shouldn’t be this way.  It should be the other way around; the students should be anxious.  But I know from bitter past experience that I’m going to be the one in the hot seat.

Inevitably, the cheating students, instead of being ashamed of having plagiarized, will react with indignation.  (Never mind that in each case, nearly the entire content of the paper had been cut and pasted from the internet.  As if I wouldn’t be suspicious after reading grammatical, well-reasoned responses from two morons who can barely write their own names.) 

Next, I will be threatened with being reported to the department chair for having dared single them out.  (Once upon a time, it would have been the professor making the threat along with a promise of certain expulsion for academic dishonesty.) 

In the end, in spite of their bristling and blustering to escape the consequences of their actions, the students will take a failing grade on the assignment.  (And I will have a strained discussion with the chair in which his assurances of support for my actions will be shaded by a strong implication that I am somehow at fault.)

I can’t help but tie this phenomenon, as with so much of what I see around me, to the moral hazard of the neoliberal age.  Higher ed is now part of the larger shell game the powerful play with the powerless.  College has become but a credentialing vehicle.  No matter how humble the vocation, a growing number require some kind of degree or certificate.  In other words, postsecondary training has become a barrier to entry into a workforce where good jobs are harder and harder to find. 

Both instructors and students are thus locked into a scheme which practically encourages shortcuts.  We are pressured to pass students who either can’t benefit from higher education or are unmotivated to work hard in the interest of maintaining enrollment and guaranteeing “student success” (i.e., persistence and graduation) numbers.  They, with some exceptions, mostly try to get the highest grade while doing as little work as possible. 

I reassure myself that the kind of students who plagiarize probably won’t get very far in school or in life.  And it’s true.  Most simply lack the intelligence and work ethic.  For all the extravagant promises made by its public relations flacks that attending Verdant Fields will transform their lives, for all their hopes of being underwater brain surgeons, their lot in life will be to drift aimlessly from low wage job to low wage job, overwhelmed by debt, seeking solace in alcohol, drugs, and transitory relationships, existing in a mental twilight without the least glimmer of insight into themselves or the world that produced them.               

I know I should feel some compassion for my two miscreants, and in an abstract, impersonal way I do.  But next week, those cheating little shits are going to pay.


© 2013 The Unassuming Scholar

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