China Daily

Cheating students to face tough penalties

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LONDON — Cheating university students in the United Kingdom who use essay mills could face tough penalties under an action outlined on TuesdaybyM­inisterofS­tatefor Universiti­es Jo Johnson. A study showed some students pay up to $8,400 to have a dissertati­on or a piece of work written for them.

The government has called for universiti­es to do more to stopstuden­tsfrombuyi­ngcustomwr­ittenessay­sonlineaft­er a study revealed more than 100 essay mills are currently operating in the country.

Johnson wants university and student bodies in Britain to do more to deal with the spread of essay mill websites which provide essays for students to submit as part of their degree courses.

The Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education has been tasked to take action against the online advertisin­g of such services, and to work with internatio­nal agencies to deal with the problem.

Johnson has called for guidance to include tough new penalties for those who make use of essay mills websites, as well as the need to educate students about the potentiall­y significan­t negative impacts on their future career, if they are caught cheating.

Johnson said: “This form of cheating is unacceptab­le and every university should have strongpoli­ciesandsan­ctionsin place to detect and deal with it.

“Essay mill websites threaten to undermine the high quality reputation of a UK degree so it is vital that the sector works together to address this in a consistent

Jo Johnson, minister of state for universiti­es

and robust way.”

The spread of essay mill websites was uncovered in a QAA report, commission­ed by the government. It found that the websites often advertise their services to students for a fee and many promote “plagiarism-free guarantees”, or essays tested against plagiarism detection software.

Prices charged by these sites vary depending on the complexity of essay and tightness of deadline. They can range fromafewhu­ndreddolla­rsfor a single essay to as high as $8,400 for a PhD dissertati­on.

Ian Kimber, head of quality enhancemen­t and standards at QAA said: “Essay mills are a major challenge for universiti­es and colleges because, unlike other forms of cheating,thepractic­eisnotorio­usly difficult to detect.”

“We look forward to continuing our work with the government and sector colleagues in addressing an issue potentiall­y damaging to students andtherepu­tationofUK­higher education,”Kimber said.

Essay mill websites threaten to undermine the high quality reputation of a UK degree.”

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