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  2. Chegg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chegg

    Purdue University prohibits students soliciting answers using Chegg's homework help: "While Chegg can be helpful to access textbooks and more practice problems, using this resource to find assignment answers is considered academic dishonesty because it is a form of copying and plagiarism.". [55]

  3. Talk:Chegg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Chegg

    Chegg would seem to be an extension of India's famed academic cheating business which has, like the rest, found success in the US. It's just the latest version of an age-old 'cheating-industrial complex' that's become a very serious problem for on-line students and institutions.

  4. Course Hero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Course_Hero

    Subscribers can download complete papers that were submitted by previous students and submit them as their own work. Additionally, the site allows students to upload homework and get completed work solutions from the site's contracted workers: an 'Essay mill' business. Users who upload content can use the site for free while others pay a fee.

  5. Academic integrity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Academic_integrity

    This was monitored mainly by the students and surrounding culture of the time. The honor code focused on duty, pride, power, and self-esteem. [15] Any act promoting the uprising or building of any of these within an individual was the goal. Thus, academic integrity was tied solely to the status and appearance of upstanding character of the ...

  6. Academic dishonesty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Academic_dishonesty

    An example of school exam cheating, a type of academic dishonesty. Academic dishonesty, academic misconduct, academic fraud and academic integrity are related concepts that refer to various actions on the part of students that go against the expected norms of a school, university or other learning institution.

  7. Contract cheating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contract_cheating

    In contrast, Lancaster and Clarke are computer scientists who found evidence of students systematically outsourcing coding assignments. Hence, they coined the term "contract cheating" to include all outsourced academic work, regardless of whether it is from text-based or non-text-based disciplines.

  8. The Cheating Culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cheating_Culture

    The author, however, also notes that blame for the cheating phenomenon does not lie upon a single class of people. Rather, it represents the individualistic ambitions of the amorphously defined "Me" generation, mixed dangerously with laissez-faire principles espoused by the 1980s neoliberals , and implemented, to America's detriment, during the ...

  9. 2012 Harvard cheating scandal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012_Harvard_cheating_scandal

    [4] [10] In 2010 and 2011, the take-home exams were essays, but in 2012 they were changed to a short answer format. [10] The change corresponded with a spike in difficulty and a drop in overall score, according to the Q Guide. [10] Students said the short answer format facilitated collaboration. [4] [10] Some guessed that the changes were ...