Cheating alleged among Wharton students

Many in OPIM 101 suspected of cheating on final last year

· September 6, 2007, 5:00 am

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A large number of Wharton students came under investigation over the summer for suspicion of cheating on last semester's Operations and Information Management 101 final project.

Multiple students in the class, which comprises mostly freshmen, confirmed that students plagiarized parts of the project and have been referred to and contacted by the Office of Student Conduct.

The OSC would not comment because of its policy of confidentiality.

OPIM professors also would not speak about the investigation because no student has been formally charged.

The final project instructed students to work in groups of two or three on a programming assignment involving complicated computer code.

Wharton officials believed that some submitted projects were too similar to each other to have been done entirely independently.

Instructions for the final project specifically prohibited collaboration among groups.

Wharton sophomore Nick Faulkner, whose group was contacted by OSC over the summer, said all groups whose projects were more than 60 percent similtar were or are being investigated.

Until being contacted by OSC, Faulkner had not known that another group had copied his project. He still does not know how anyone else got a copy.

The OSC is not charging Faulkner with plagiarism.

One Wharton sophomore, who requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter, said that 80 percent of his friend's case had been plagiarized by another group.

"Her group's case had been accessed through a public computer," he said. "At the end of last semester, her case grade wasn't disclosed because the investigation was still pending," he said.

Though professors would not say if they were aware of such behavior, a private tutor from the class, Wharton senior Jason Toff, confirmed that many such cases occurred.

Toff, who does not know how many students are suspected of cheating, said that from his understanding, professors soon learned what was going on because of "excessive overlaps." The professors then "created a piece of software that compared" cases.

"For whatever reason, it wasn't clear to the students what was collaboration and what was going too far," he said.

Some students shared their code with other groups and then redid their own code in a different way, said another Wharton sophomore, who preferred to remain anonymous because he is friends with some students under investigation.

Because the class is so difficult and so much of the coding material has to be learned outside of class, it is natural for students to turn to outside resources like professors, TAs or students who are better at OPIM for help, Wharton sophomore Alex Anderson said.

"A good comparison would be if you were using a Wikipedia article to get information on a topic and then writing a paper based off of that information" he said.

In the meantime, OPIM 101 professors are not saying anything about the cases and have directed all related questions to OPIM 101 professor Thomas Lee.

"Primarily, we want to protect any student who might have been referred," said Lee, who would not confirm any investigation. "We don't want to give anyone who is not involved the false impression that these students have been accused of anything."

Comments (5)

Jason Toff

December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm

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To clarify, I CANNOT confirm any cases of plagiarism. All I CAN confirm is that the allegations are primarily not about one student copying another student's case. Rather, they involve less clear degrees of collaboration (i.e. a person from one team coaching a person from another team on a section of the case, someone forgetting to delete their case from a public computer, etc.). As a separate clarification, the case in question was NOT the final (as incorrectly stated in the sub-heading). I'm not sure about Fall 07, but in Fall 06 the case counted for 15% of the overall grade.

Haha

December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm

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Hahaha stupid Wharton tools

Shakes Head

December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm

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Why am I not surprised?

pinky121

April 26, 2010, 6:47 am

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I think the major reason of the student cheating is lack of proper teaching form teacher side especially for the science students. Here is provided some tips in this aspect.I know that teaching science to elementary students is critical for establishing a foundation for further success in science. There is a need for some basic memorization of facts; however memorization of everything involving science eliminates the inner curiosity students have about the natural world. Science should be fun and interesting. When students become actively involved in learning science, they retain more than just rote memorization of science facts. Instead of just using worksheets and completing canned science experiments, make science challenging. Science Teaching TipsInquiry, critical thinking, questioning, science games, integration of technology, interactive science websites, and more:Students Asking Questions – natural curiosity is built around asking questions. Have students develop questions they want to know about something they are investigating.* For example: Why do plants grow toward the sunlight? Or, Where do rainbows come from? This makes the lesson more personal and more likely to be internalized by the student.Teachers Asking Questions – help students with critical thinking skills by asking them open-ended guiding questions about an investigation they are conducting. * For example: Is there any other way you can measure the weight of this book? See 20 Questions to Ask Children for additional examples.Collect Own Data – instead of using data from canned labs or textbooks , allow students to collect their own data. This is critical for personalizing the investigation and allowing the students to become actively engaged in learning. * For example: Measuring the growth of a plant or how far a ball rolls on different materials etc.

pinky121

April 26, 2010, 6:55 am

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hi

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