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Write from Wrong: Strategies for Addressing Student Plagiarism. Barry Gilmore (www.barrygilmore.com). Prompt: Write an essay about names and identity in The House on Mango Street.
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Write from Wrong: Strategies for Addressing Student Plagiarism Barry Gilmore (www.barrygilmore.com)
Prompt: Write an essay about names and identity in The House on Mango Street. Most of the women Esperanza knows on Mango Street are either trapped in their marriages or tied down by their children. For example, Esperanza’s grandmother. Esperanza did not want to “inherit her place by the window.” She neither likes what she has already inherited from her grandmother—her name. Esperanza plays with words when she first expresses her dissatisfaction with her name. She says that in Spanish, her name means “too many letters. It means sadness [from the opposite of esperar, which is desesperarse], it means waiting [from the verb esperar].”
Names are a very important part of one’s personality. The name Sarah, for instance, comes from the Bible. This shows that names have a long tradition for many people. Tradition helps to determine the adult one becomes.
Dear Joel, Did you know that my name comes from the Bible? Actually, I’m not sure who Sarah was, but my mom told me she learned about my name in Sunday School when she was a kid. Sarah
Dear Sarah, That’s cool. Joel is a religious name, too. It means God. So I’m like God, only I don’t really think that so don’t think I’m full of myself please. You should find out more about your name. Let me know if you do. Your friend (but not God), Joel
Hey Joel, I don’t think your God either. Sarah P.S. Hey I’m just kidding and I think Joel is a cool name.
Sarah. HA HAHA. I just asked Ms. R about you’re name and she says Sarah was Abraham’s wife and she had a baby when she was 90!!! I don’t know who Abraham was, though, but he’s in the bible too. You should write about that. Joel
That’s a good idea but I don’t want to have a baby when I’m 90 because I couldn’t pick it up or something. Babys are gross anyway. Do you want babies someday? Sarah
Dear Sarah, No way. Joel
Leading questions Who gave you your name? Why? Compare one sound in your name to another sound. Describe that sound. Will you still like your name in 20 years? Why do you like or dislike your name? What mistakes do people make when they say your name? What do they think about you when they hear your name?
From an exchange student… The correct way to pronounce my name is “a’-kee-eh”. Each sylable pronounced distinctly and sharply without blending into the next sylable. Unfortunately, when people try to pronounce it “in the right way,” they actually mispronounce it by creating a whole different word, sound, and meaning: a’-ki-ya. Which means an “empty house” in the Japanese language. In my opinion, being “a key” is better than being an “empty house,” because akie is from the word aki. Which in Japanese language means autumn the best season of the year! Even though the pronunciation of autumn aki is different from the English word “a key” I am willing to be “a key”. I could lock door of an empty house. -AkieMaekawa
Several drafts later…. My name is Sarah. It’s a name from the Bible, but that’s not why I like it. I love my name because it rolls on your tongue, because my mother gave it to me as a gift, and because it ends with the sound you make when you see a beautiful mountain or sunrise. I like to think of my mother holding me after I was born, looking down at me wrapped up like a present and saying my name: Sarah. I don’t know what the grown-up Sarah looks like yet, just like I don’t know what grown-up Sarah does for a job, where she lives, or whether she has a family of her own. When she looks back, I don’t know what she’ll remember about me. But we’ll have one thing in common: a name.
Sample student introduction (Spencer) A symbol is an object, action, or event that represents something or that creates a range of associations beyond itself. In the book A Thousand Splendid Suns, one symbol is the clothing that women have to wear. This clothing reveals many things about the characters and the themes of the work as a whole.
Case Study: Take It Or Leave It (The Christine Pelton Leaf Project) The project: research, writing, presentation
Case Study: Take It Or Leave It (The Christine Pelton Leaf Project) The project: research, writing, presentation Classroom results: 25% plagiarism
Case Study: Take It Or Leave It (The Christine Pelton Leaf Project) The project: research, writing, presentation Classroom results: 25% plagiarism Student/parent contract
Case Study: Take It Or Leave It (The Christine Pelton Leaf Project) The project: research, writing, presentation Classroom results: 25% plagiarism Student/parent contract Administration / school board response
Case Study: Take It Or Leave It (The Christine Pelton Leaf Project) The project: research, writing, presentation Classroom results: 25% plagiarism Student/parent contract Administration / school board response Long-term consequences
Case Study: Take It Or Leave It (The Christine Pelton Leaf Project) A. Teacher/Administration: Students receive a zero B. Parents/Students: Students should be given another chance (rewrite) C. School Board: Students receive a zero, but reduce the value of the assignment
What Are We Talking About? Plagiarism
What Are We Talking About? Student Choices Plagiarism
What Are We Talking About? Student Choices Plagiarism Turnitin.com Failing, rewriting? Punitive response
What Are We Talking About? Pressure: Grades Intent Pressure: Time Ease Student Choices Plagiarism Turnitin.com Failing, rewriting? Punitive response
What’s the Main Reason Your Students Plagiarize? A. It’s easy to do / they get lazy B. They’re confused / it’s a mistake C. They feel pressure about grades D. They get behind on deadlines E. Everyone does it, so they do it too
What Are We Talking About? Pressure: Grades Intent Pressure: Time Ease Student Choices Plagiarism Turnitin.com Failing, rewriting? Punitive response
What Are We Talking About? Pressure: Grades Intent Pressure: Time Ease Teacher Choices Student Choices Plagiarism Turnitin.com Failing, rewriting? Punitive response
Case Study: Take It Or Leave It (The Christine Pelton Leaf Project) Merit and Purpose of Assignment Failure vs. Zero Plagiarism Instruction vs. Assumptions
What Are We Talking About? Pressure: Grades Intent Pressure: Time Ease Teacher Choices Student Choices Plagiarism Assignments Turnitin.com Assumptions Failing, rewriting? Expectations Punitive response
What Are We Talking About? Pressure: Time Pressure: Grades Intent Intent Pressure: Time Ease Ease Teacher Choices Student Choices Plagiarism Assignments Turnitin.com Assumptions Failing, rewriting? Expectations Punitive response
What Are We Talking About? Pressure: Time Pressure: Grades Intent Intent Pressure: Time Ease Ease Teacher Choices Student Choices Culture Plagiarism Assignments Turnitin.com Assumptions Failing, rewriting? Expectations Punitive response
Case Study: Take It Or Leave It (The Christine Pelton Leaf Project) Merit and Purpose of Assignment Failure vs. Zero Plagiarism Instruction vs. Assumptions Alignment of Policy: School and Class Consistency from Classroom to Classroom
What Are We Talking About? Pressure: Time Pressure: Grades Intent Intent Pressure: Time Ease Ease Teacher Choices Student Choices Culture Plagiarism Systems Assignments Turnitin.com Honor Codes Assumptions Failing, rewriting? Ethics Gap Expectations Punitive response
Reduces Plagiarism Increases Learning
Reduces Plagiarism Increases Learning Honor Code as a part of school culture Honor Code
Reduces Plagiarism Increases Learning Honor Code as a part of school culture Honor Code Turnitin.com as a teaching tool Turnitin.com
Does Turnitin.com work? Sample results from Penn State, 2005
Reduces Plagiarism Increases Learning Honor Code as a part of school culture Honor Code Turnitin.com as a teaching tool Turnitin.com Standardized Expectations and Response Strict Consequences
What’s the Usual Response to Plagiarism in Your School? A. Ignore it B. Deal with it in classroom C. Report it to the administration D. Add to shared files for a two-strike system
School Culture: What’s Going On? Students who cheat tend to: Worry about school Research by Eric M. Anderman
School Culture: What’s Going On? Students who cheat tend to: Worry about school Perceive school as focused on grades Research by Eric M. Anderman
School Culture: What’s Going On? Students who cheat tend to: Worry about school Perceive school as focused on grades Believe they’ll receive rewards for grades Research by Eric M. Anderman
School Culture: What’s Going On? Students who cheat tend to: Worry about school Perceive school as focused on grades Believe they’ll receive rewards for grades Attribute failure to outside circumstances Research by Eric M. Anderman
School Culture: What’s Going On? Students who cheat tend to: Worry about school Perceive school as focused on grades Believe they’ll receive rewards for grades Attribute failure to outside circumstances Avoid deep-level cognitive strategies in problem solving Research by Eric M. Anderman