Yorkshire Post

Clampdown on sites for cheating students

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UNIVERSITI­ES ARE being urged to consider blocking websites and using smarter plagiarism-detecting software in a bid to crack down on cheating.

The universiti­es watchdog the Quality Assurance Agency has issued advice for institutio­ns to crack down on “contract cheating” and the use of “essay mills”, which will write work for students for payment.

It comes after Universiti­es Minister Jo Johnson asked the QAA, vice-chancellor­s’ group Universiti­es UK (UUK) and the National Union of Students to draw up new guidance for institutio­ns on how to deal with the issue.

A report released by the QAA suggests a raft of measures which universiti­es could implement, including using organisati­on-wide linguistic analysis tools to detect changes in a student’s writing style and employing text-matching software; blocking known essay mill websites from the organisati­on’s IT systems; providing support for struggling students who could be tempted to use an essay mill and introducin­g a mixture of assessment­s to limit cheating opportunit­ies.

Students already face penalties for academic misconduct – including the use of essay services – ranging from losing marks to being removed from a degree course, depending on the circumstan­ces and severity of the case.

But the report urges universiti­es to make it explicit to students that cheating could cost them their qualificat­ion.

An investigat­ion by the QAA last year found there were more than 100 essay mill websites in operation. Prices for essays vary depending on the complexity of the work and the deadline, but can range from a couple of hundred pounds for a single essay to around £6,750 for a PhD dissertati­on.

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