Saw this article on MSN web site
Kids are coming up with new ways to cheat, copy, and steal. It's up to you to help them learn right from wrong.
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...cheat sheet for his chemistry exam on the inside of a water-bottle label.
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"Today's middle school students have been using computers since they could walk," says Don McCabe, Ph.D., a professor at Rutgers University who has done several studies on cheating and plagiarism. At the same time, other factors -- including out-of-control grade pressure -- have affected kids' attitudes toward cheating.
Do Kids Care?
McCabe's studies show alarmingly cavalier attitudes toward cheating. Of 4,500 high school students he interviewed during the 2000/2001 school year, a full 75 percent admitted having cheated at least once on a test, which is up from 50 percent in 1993 and 25 percent in 1963. Among 7th graders, 64 percent said they had collaborated with other students when they were supposed to be working alone; 48 percent admitted having copied homework from someone else, and 87 percent said they had let someone else copy homework from them.
The stigma attached to cheating, apparently, has been losing strength over the years and is now hanging on by a thread.
More:
http://family.msn.com/tool/article.aspx?dept=learn&sdept=lea&name=sc_070204_cheaterIs it any wonder kids think it is OK to cheat? When we have examples of it in the White House and many other prominent positions?