Yesterday while perusing my facebook page I came across a post from a former colleague and friend that was attending the eRevolution eLearning conference.
Here is the picture she posted...
I was born in the 1950's, raised with the theory of right and wrong. Today we have new ideas and terminology are we moving the line that was drawn between right and wrong.
Here is the picture she posted...
In the "real world" cheating is called collaboration.
She asked for our thoughts. I of course googled this statement and found that a blogger from Wisconsin, Penelope Trunk wrote a post about this very statement. Here is the link to that post if you are interested, click here.
Here are some of the comments from that facebook post...
here is another persons thoughts on the subject..."I was always that kid that loathed to share my genius with fellow students. The idea of someone cheating and looking over at my answers during a test BOILS MY BLOOD TO THIS DAY. If Jimmy to my right copied my answers because he has eyes like a bloody hawk, that's not collaboration. That's theft. Jimmy is a thieving bastard.However, here in Austria, there's far more cheating going around during homework assignments and quizzes and it's more or less tolerated, I think due to the idea that the kids are still learning, and they have much harder end of the year exams where cheating is all but impossible. IT STILL MAKES ME WANT TO HIT THEM WITH REEDS.
and I will share this last one..."I think saying cheating is collaboration is to blanket a statement. Sure, some situations warrant collaboration, the more minds the merrier! but collaboration can also be the enemy of self-sufficiency, self-reliance and independence.""I think it depends on context. Even in the real world you can get in trouble for using others work or ideas - cheating or copyright infringement or fraud. However, collaboration is also encouraged and celebrated when the context is project based, peer editing, et al. Context is key here!"
And finally I want to give you this link to an article written on this very subject by The Wall Street Journal, titled; How Could a Sweet Third-Grader Just Cheat on That School Exam? click here."Collaboration is an active give and take connection with exchange of ideas. Cheating is one sided, secret, covering up of what you don't know and taking it from another without the respectful connection between humans."
I was born in the 1950's, raised with the theory of right and wrong. Today we have new ideas and terminology are we moving the line that was drawn between right and wrong.