The Student News Site of Sacramento City College

The Express

The Student News Site of Sacramento City College

The Express

The Student News Site of Sacramento City College

The Express

odd news | The cheaters

Christopher Geanakos | News Editor
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After publishing my last column on students who work hard to complete their courses, it seems only fair that I highlight a shadier group of students, those who get by through the work of others. They are the figurative parasites in the academic world. They are the cheaters.

It has been somewhat surprising to me that throughout the many classes I’ve taken during the many semesters I’ve been at City College, I’ve never really encountered cheating. Based on responses by many students on campus, true cases of cheating are indeed rare, but according to City College art history professor Valerie Kidrick, they do occur from time to time.

Kidrick said that plagiarism is the most typical type of cheating she comes across.

“A person, who shall remain nameless, told me that one of his students turned in a paper which was a review of an art exhibit,” Kidrick said. “The review was taken out of the local newspaper and it was written by the instructor’s wife.”

Kidrick said the student should have realized this situation, as the instructor has the same last name as the article’s author.
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“I think in the end, they’ll get what’s coming to them because they won’t know what they’re doing,” said City College student Quinn Chevalier about those who cheat academically.

Kidrick also acknowledged there was a difference between plagiarism and other forms of cheating. She said she hasn’t had much of a problem with other forms of cheating, though she did recount one personal experience.

“I gave an exam where there was a slide portion of it, and I left the slide key on the front desk,” Kidrick said. “I walked out of the room to get a cup of coffee or answer the phone or something, and then I came back. Some of my students told me that someone in this class was checking the slide sheets and correcting.”

Ruben Meza relayed his own personal cheating experience. He said in high school a group of his friends got the answers to a test and passed it around.

“We got the A,” Meza said. “It was a good score, but we had to change the test to make it look like we didn’t copy off each other.”

Meza was quick to add that he hasn’t done anything like that since high school, and that people who cheat “are doing it the lazy way.”

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