This may be why cheating among high school and college students is out of control.
Shirley Malone-Fenner, Wheelock College’s vice-president in charge of academic affairs for the Boston based college, resigned today. The reason: though her responsibilities included oversight of the investigation and discipline of students accused of academic plagiarism, Malone-Fenner’s welcome-back letter to the faculty last month…was plagiarized.
The inspiring four-page letter from Malone-Fenner contained at least six passages from the letter Harvard’s president Drew Faust wrote to her returning faculty in 2007. Experienced plagiarists, however—and who has more experience with plagiarism than a college’s academic affairs authority?— knows that it is better to mix sources, so the letter also contained verbatim and barely altered phrases, sentences, and passages from a 2004 welcome letter from the president of Rutgers University, as well as sections of a 2010 letter from the president of the University of the Pacific in California.
A suspicious Wheelock professor ran Malone-Fenner’s letter through software the school uses to detect student plagiarism, discovering the damning parallels. The faculty subsequently called for her metaphorical head.
That head didn’t help matters by dreaming up pathetic explanations like this one, which she gave to the Boston Globe:
“In preparing my message, I reviewed many letters from other institutions and used words from others’ welcoming messages without attribution. What I intended to share is quite simple — I am excited about working with each member of the faculty to make this a most successful year.”
Translation: “Crap, you got me.”
What does what she was “trying to do” and how “excited” she was about it have to do with the fact that she obviously and unethically tried to pass off the words of others as her own? I bet many of the students she has nailed for plagiarism have come up with better excuses than that. Continue reading