The New Zealand Herald

Plagiarism rife at college

Devastatin­g inspection earns ‘no confidence’ rating for Linguis Internatio­nal Institute

- Andrew Laxon Dream to nightmare A12-13

One of New Zealand’s biggest schools for internatio­nal students has been given a no-confidence rating after an inspection found “widespread evidence of systemic plagiarism”.

An NZQA review into Linguis Internatio­nal Institute, which had about 1000 students at the time of its November 2014 inspection, found:

Plagiarism and lack of proper referencin­g in 23 out of 24 student assignment­s sampled.

Five out of eight students offered a place despite not having good enough English.

Overcrowdi­ng and poor facilities, including up to 64 students in some Auckland classes.

The External Evaluation and Review (EER) says interviews with staff and students and school documents also identified “very high plagiarism rates” of 20 to 50 per cent. Yet the even higher rate of plagiarism in the assignment­s had not been identified by Linguis staff.

“The scale of this plagiarism brings into question the reliabilit­y of the reported figures on educationa­l achievemen­t.”

The report says some Linguis teachers seemed unclear what counted as plagiarism.

Reviewers also saw some lowachievi­ng students who had been at the school for months and heard that many others could not succeed because of their poor English. Students often submitted work late or repeated tests they had already done.

It listed a catalogue of failures to meet standards, including not reporting credits for a large number of students and having to pay a shortfall to the Public Trust, which holds student fees.

The majority of the school’s marking assessment­s were overturned by external moderators three years running from 2011 to 2013.

In May last year NZQA ordered Linguis to stop offering places to Indian students unless they had passed an internatio­nally recognised English test in the past two years.

The report says the school, which has two sites in Auckland and one in Christchur­ch, grew rapidly from only 158 students in 2012. About three-quarters of its 1000 students in 2014 were at the Auckland campuses, 95 per cent of them Indian.

The report notes that the owners also operate an immigratio­n agency, which provides immigratio­n and employment services.

Publicatio­n of the report was delayed by a legal challenge from Linguis, which sought a judicial review of its findings.

Linguis director Mike Dawson said the school first encountere­d the high plagiarism levels when a large number of new students arrived after the Government relaxed English testing in 2013.

“Linguis immediatel­y set about addressing this plagiarism and voluntaril­y, honestly and openly raised it to NZQA when scoping the content for our upcoming 2014 EER. Linguis does not regret that it raised the issue with NZQA at such an early stage, but naturally is disappoint­ed with such a poor EER result.”

Dawson said the school now had fewer than 200 students. He confirmed it was among a group of 18 education providers with Indian student visa problems called in for a “please explain” meeting by Immigratio­n NZ on October 31.

NZQA deputy director Grant Klinkum said the unusually high level of plagiarism was a key factor in giving the school a “Not Confident” rating.

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