Of academic fraud and the education crisis
Editeur : Washington, The Washington Times, 2000
Pages :
Collection : The World and I Magazine
Notes :
The World Wide Web has given students unprecedented access to legitimate and illegitimate education resources. Steinberg gives an oversight of the implications of it on present-day higher education. He thus describes how, in the U.S., internet-based research and term paper mills have become a booming industry, even though sixteen States have made it illegal since 1995 to sell academic research and term papers. On this basis, he raises the question: how can legislators, professors or administrators rightfully tell if a submitted piece of academic work was personally written or professionally subcontracted?
- Fraude académique , Tricherie , Usines à dissertations , Accès à l'éducation, Gestion de l'éducation, Administration centrale, Administration universitaire , Examens et diplômes, Recherche, Elèves/étudiants , Personnel universitaire , Higher education
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Amériques et Caraïbes
Etats-Unis