Education
Related: About this forum"I Helped College Kids Cheat" Inside the Academic Fraud Industry
http://www.alternet.org/i-helped-college-kids-cheat-inside-academic-fraud-industryAcademic paper millsthe companies that write papers for studentsdont really advertise. One doesnt see their services in the backs of magazines or populating the margins of Web pages. If such companies market at all, its frequently done using spam text, with links, in the comments section of Web sites read by college students. On one such site recently, for example, SolisSharon26 posted the following item:
Young people who are studying in the universities feel necessity for professional writing online because usually they do not have enough time so that deal with there assignments by themselves. Browse the site and you will find the firm which crew is accessible 24/7 to order essay.
Im not sure Id trust people who write like this with my credit card number, much less to take care of my Intro to American Government term paper. But there are more professional ads like this all over the Internet, where a cheating student can follow the link provided, send a fee, and in a few hours or days receive a paper. Its pretty easy to picture the stressed-out or lazy students who buy this stuff. Its harder to imagine the kind of people who make their living producing it.
This world became a little less shadowy when, on November 12, 2010, the Chronicle of Higher Education ran an article, The Shadow Scholar, in which a writer using the pseudonym Ed Dante wrote that hed been turning out American college students essays for the last decade. Dante had written some 5,000 papers. I work at a company that generates tens of thousands of dollars a month creating essays based on instructions provided by cheating students. On any day, I am working on upward of 20 assignments. Youve never heard of me, he explained, but theres a good chance that youve read some of my work. At least if you are a professor.
Democracyinkind
(4,015 posts)It must have been the best paying job I ever had. Well maybe not, but I didn't have to show up for work anywhere. But I did it in private, not for a company. Still, after writing 2 or 3 papers, I suddenly got very lucrative offers like "could you write the substance of a PhD thesis in history for 5000"? I'm ashamed that I did this - eventually, I couldn't live with myself anymore, despite all the nice things I could buy. Once in a while I walk into people that I wrote things for, many of them now working at the same University that I do. thinking about that makes me want to vomit, and makes me even more ashamed.
Then again, I simply can't imagine that I'd trust some random company on the internet to write my papers. The chances of getting ripped off must be astronomical - what are you going to do if they simply never send you the paper? Sue them?
It's not a new problem, either. My boss tells allot of wild stories about forging stuff and ghostwriting papersin the pre-digital era ("That guy on TV yesterday? Don't take him seriously. He didn't write his thesis by himself" . It's just that it has become soooooo much easier now that we're all connected.
madaboutharry
(41,353 posts)Thanks for posting.
democrat in Tallahassee
(3,531 posts)I gave 3 zeroes for this this semester alone--students just waste money and then fail anyway by using these companies. Many times the
paper is too well written and written at too high of a level.
savebigbird
(417 posts)...but the grammar errors committed by "SolisSharon26" are making me cry inside.
eridani
(51,907 posts)You can't charge as much, obviously, but I used to prepare outlines of papers and collect a set of references )annotated by me) for my clients to read. At $30 each, not particularly lucrative, even in the 60s. i think most people can write coherently once they get started, but for a majority it seems that starting is the sticking point. More than one client took off in a different direction from my outline based on a reference they found interesting. And no problem with a bunch of papers sounding alike turning up all over a small campus. There's a difference between being a chauffer and giving someone some spark plugs.