Bangkok Post today

Local Hua Hin and regional Thailand news articles and discussion.
Post Reply
User avatar
Bamboo Grove
Moderator
Moderator
Posts: 5296
Joined: Mon Jan 13, 2003 12:59 pm
Location: Macau, China

Bangkok Post today

Post by Bamboo Grove »

Two things in Bangkok Post today caught my eye.
Cheatingat university on the rise

Students sit exams for others, plagiarise texts

SIRIKUL BUNNAG

Thammasat University says increasing numbers of students are cheating their way to university degrees, with a sharp rise in exam cheating and thesis plagiarism.

''It is worrying that most students who cheated on exams think that cheating is normal.

''It never occurred to them that what they did is morally wrong,'' said law lecturer Somkiat Worapanyaanan.

According to the university's records, a total of 240 undergraduate and graduate students were caught cheating on exams during the 1997-2006 academic years, compared to 113 between 1987-1996 and 56 between 1976-1986.

Disciplinary officer Waleeporn Tanthapanich said students with lacklustre grades were hiring other students to sit tests on their behalf.

''Such tolerance of cheating shows that university students today do not hold honesty in high regard,'' she told a seminar organised at the university's Tha Prachan campus yesterday by the Women and Youth Studies Programme.

Theses and research papers were copied blatantly with only the covers changed. In many cases, professional paper writers were hired to do the work.

She said plagiarism was common even for simple study assignments.

It extended to the area of professional training, such as denture fabrication by dentistry students.

The most common crime in dormitories and classrooms was robbery, with cellphones and laptop computers being the most sought-after items.

Ms Waleeporn blamed the rising problems on lax disciplinary measures.

Ms Waleeporn pointed out that only one student was caught cheating on exams in 1975 when the university imposed the harshest punishment for the offence _ expulsion.

Today, the disciplinary measures are merely one-year class suspension and community services, and exam cheating is rising as a result, she said.

Mr Somkiat pointed to a widening gap between students and their advisers.

It was the advisers' responsibility to give moral guidance to students in their charge, as well as prepare them for tests and assignments, he said.

He also accused some teachers of helping students in the wrong way.

Starting this year, university instructors found guilty of tampering with test results, leaking exam contents, or plagiarism are to be punished by dismissal, according to the Civil Service Commission.

Surin Ronnakiat, a psychology lecturer at the liberal arts faculty, said there have been no attempts to give counselling to student offenders.

First offenders should be given an opportunity to shape up so they won't repeat mistakes that would land them in serious trouble, he added.
I think the numbers are too small, actually. In between 1990-98 I taught in a commercial college (P4-6 and PWS). What I found was that cheating was very common and no real punishments were given to those who got caught..
Sometimes the effort to try to cheat was bigger than it would have been to study the things they were supposed to know in the exam. Talking about plagiarism; when I first asked my students to write an essay, I got 25 exactly the same essays and another 20 of another kind. Two students had written their own essay and the others copied from these two. Nobody seemed to think they´d done something wrong. This kind of attitude must be learned from a very early age, I reckon.

The other thing was
Thaksin's bag gets stolen at McDonald's

Tharit: Loss reported to police

Ousted prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra's suitcase containing his passport, cash and a camera worth a total of 1.2 million baht was stolen as he was eating at a McDonald's restaurant in Moscow early this week, sources said yesterday.

Other items taken included documents relating to a lawsuit against the Assets Scrutiny Committee (ASC) members, according to the sources.

The former premier was in Moscow to receive an honorary degree in science from the Prekanov Economic Institute.

It remained unclear whether he was awarded the degree before or after his belongings were stolen.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Tharit Jarungwat confirmed the report, saying that Mr Thaksin reported the loss to a police station before applying for a new passport at the Thai embassy.

He has been given temporary travel documents.

The cash inside the suitcase was in foreign currency and some documents involved a lawsuit which he and his legal adviser Noppadol Pattama were preparing to file against ASC chairman Nam Yimyaem and other key members, including Kaewsan Atibhoti, the sources said.

The Thai embassy in Moscow issued a temporary travel document and he was expected to get a new passport from the Thai embassy in London where he has a residence.
So the lesson is; stay away from McDonald´s, particulary if you have over 1 million in your bag. Go to Burger King instead.
:cheers:
Post Reply