Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Indiabased ‘contract cheating’ hits UK varsities

- Prasun Sonwalkar prasun.sonwalkar@hindustant­imes.com

LONDON: The quality of degrees from British universiti­es is being undermined by a large number of online “essay mills” and India-based “contract cheating” that enables students to acquire assignment­s – from essays to PhD dissertati­ons – for a fee, officials and academics say.

Universiti­es minister Jo Johnson on Tuesday called on university and student bodies to do more to deal with the spread of “essay mills” or websites that provide custom written essays for students to submit as part of their degree

Academics told HT that thousands of students at British universiti­es have also been using Indian expertise in IT in a growing phenomenon called “contract cheating”, whereby course assignment­s are contracted to freelancer­s and others online for a fee.

The phenomenon – first reported in academic circles in 2008 by Thomas Lancaster and Robert Clarke at Birmingham City University – has become more sophistica­ted over the years, making it difficult to detect through usual plagiarism detection software.

Lancaster told HT: “We’ve observed a lot of people from India bidding to complete academic work for students. They make offers that are very appealing to students from the UK, they’ll do the assignment for what is a low price for a UK student, but a good living wage for the worker in India.”

Universiti­es have plagiarism detection software, but several websites also offer “plagiarism-free guarantees”, or essays and assignment­s tested against such detection software, making it difficult for academics to confirm the authentici­ty of a student’s work.

Johnson said: “This form of cheating is unacceptab­le and every university should have strong policies and sanctions in place to detect and deal with it.”

The spread of “essay mill” websites was uncovered in a report by the Quality Assurance Agency (QAA), an independen­t body tasked with safeguardi­ng standards and improving the quality of higher education in Britain.

The QAA confirmed the existence of more than 100 such websites, with prices depending on the complexity of assignment­s and tightness of deadlines. They can range from a couple of hundred pounds for one essay to as high as £6,750 for a PhD dissertati­on.

According to Lancaster, India-based advertisin­g for such services mention possession of degrees from UK universiti­es, which suggests they are familiar with the British education system.

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