Jusletter IT

Do we really want our plagiarism detection service to submit student 'academic misconduct' profiles to 'consumer reporting agencies'?

  • Autor/Autorin: Orlan Lee
  • Kategorie: Kurzbeiträge
  • Region: Jordanien
  • Rechtsgebiete: E-Commerce
  • Sammlung: Tagungsband IRIS 2012
  • Zitiervorschlag: Orlan Lee, Do we really want our plagiarism detection service to submit student 'academic misconduct' profiles to 'consumer reporting agencies'?, in: Jusletter IT 29. Februar 2012
There is no question that we are plagued by ‘cut and paste’ plagiarism in school and university today. Software that facilitates rapid detection of suspected plagiarism can be immensely time-saving to the individual instructor obliged to sort out offending material. However, we must distinguish between free software that does the job with a little effort, and outsourcing services that retain and exploit student personal data.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

  • 1. Should Plagiarism-Detection Include Profiling of Juveniles
  • 2. Academic Discipline and Inability to Distinguish ‘Fact’ from ‘Opinion’
  • 3. The Personal Profiling Marketplace
  • 4. Back to the Surveillance Societies of the 20th Century
  • 5. Are These Concerns ‘U.S.-Centric’? Relevance for the U.K., the E.U., and the Commonwealth
  • 6. Why Did 13-Year-Olds Lose on the Vicarious ‘Waiver’ of Their Basic Rights by Their School Boards?
  • 7. Surreptitious ‘Waiver’ of Our Basic Rights Is the Real Issue

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