No, she's breaking the rules. It's called a lack of integrity and cheating, not intelligence. She is taking advantage of the curriculum rather than expanding her knowledge. Just because multiple classes give you opportunities to expand your knowledge doesn't mean it's ok to break the academic code of integrity and re-use old projects. The rules SPECIFICALLY STATE YOU MAY NOT DO SO WITHOUT PERMISSION. This is cut and dry. This is EXTREMELY CLEAR. You are cheating when you do this, it is not "smart", it's doing things in a half assed manner. You don't deserve your degree if you obtained it this way. You need to re-take the courses you cheated through because you minimize the efforts of the people who actually did the work and you come out less qualified. You are a fucking dick. I'd quit or fail before I'd cheat, FUCKING PERIOD. I will NEVER sacrifice my integrity in such a manner, fucking cheater. ]
4/28/2010 9:53:52 AM
This was the hidden beauty of CHASS. Sure, it was worthless otherwise and prepared you for a nice 35K salary upon graduation. However, so many of the papers were so open ended that you could tweak almost any existing topic to a suitable paper for that class.
4/28/2010 9:55:24 AM
I did this once. Made an A on the paper I used for another class then reused it for a different class (I talked with the teacher about it first) and made a D when he graded it. Lesson learned.[Edited on April 28, 2010 at 9:57 AM. Reason : .]
4/28/2010 9:56:42 AM
i have used chunks of old papers before, but have never had an assignment that was identical to one from a previous classnothing wrong with using older stuff, but IMO it is best used to supplement the material in a new assignment as opposed to using it as the main argument
4/28/2010 9:57:53 AM
my mentor at an internship one summer said "yeah, in school they want everything to be original and new and all this stuff, but at work, you learn that if it worked before it'll work again"
4/28/2010 10:07:26 AM
You guys are seemingly arguing using the same exact paper, when the smart kids used the same 80% core and altered the other 20% or so to fit the needs of that particular assignmentHistory paper about the Greensboro sit in - 20% + 20% new material = A speech on how the civil rights movement transformed the southern states both culturally and economically
4/28/2010 10:09:43 AM
^exactly.
4/28/2010 10:11:55 AM
4/28/2010 3:17:05 PM
Bridget's intellect makes me hotI'm AstralAdvent and i approved this message.
4/28/2010 3:20:51 PM
4/28/2010 3:21:17 PM
4/29/2010 9:50:44 AM
I'm still not seeing ANY reasoning for why using one's old work constitutes cheating, plagiarism (the 'self-' prefix cracks me up. Let's just totally negate the definition of the word!), or dishonesty.What I see are lots of arguments for not doing it, but none that address integrity. The only ones that even come close to addressing the perceived integrity are 'well, what would your professor think?' And being that professors tend to want their students to capitalize on opportunities to learn, of course they're not going to approve. That doesn't make it cheating or dishonest, though.I'll save you some time:"It's cheating because the honor code prohibits it". Why does the honor code prohibit it?"If the professor isn't okay with it, and you do it anyways, that's dishonesty". Eh, close enough. I would say a better word is disapproval, than dishonesty, but I see the point. However, one's professor is not the final arbiter of morality, nor is it their role to make the most of your college experience.These two reasons don't address why some of you seem to think that resubmitting (for the sake argument, a barely re-worked) paper is an action that lacks integrity, is wrong, and should not be done. I will agree it's lazy and one is likely to be shorting one's self by doing so, but that's the student's prerogative.
4/29/2010 10:17:15 AM
Judge ambrosia1231 rules in favor of the defendant; you CAN reuse a paper, you're just lazy.
4/29/2010 10:38:08 AM
4/29/2010 2:24:52 PM