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MARCH 2006 "NEWSLETTER OF HOPE" CONTENTS
1. The Cheating Game: "Everyone's Doing It," from Grade School to Graduate School
2. A Cheating Crisis in America's Schools
3. Study Finds Widespread Lying and Cheating Among US Teens
4. Wired for Cheating
5. SUSIE SPEAKS: Advanced Placement Stress

March is the month when preparations for Advanced Placement exams begin and Health Awareness messages are in abundance. Many middle schools, high schools, communities and colleges plan assemblies and events around healthy choice issues in March.

Of course, our belief is that healthy choice awareness is best when considered in daily decisions. Noticing moments of stress, emotional uneasiness, a drop in self-worth, anger, fear or critical self-talk are vital to the decisions teens and adults make – including ethical choices like to cheat or not to cheat, that is the question this month. This month’s NEWS of HOPE addresses a prevalent issue in the world of youth and young adults - Cheating. We can respond to this concern first by understanding what motivates cheating and then how to reduce the pressures and GUIDE YOUR TEEN TO GOOD CHOICES AND SUCCESS!

(Photos: College of the Sequoias, Visalia, California - "Health Fair" on Valentine's Day! Merrilyn Brady - Coordinator of Health Services - and her Health Center staff at the College conveyed the meaningful message that learning to love yourself leads to healthier choices. Enjoy the local mountain view as well - stunning!)


Susie's LEGACY OF HOPE Programs OPEN TO THE PUBLIC For March
March 9 - Tuffree Middle School - Evening Community Program - 6:30pm - Placentia, CA
March 26 - National Council of Jewish Women - Community Program for Youth and Adults - Long Beach, CA
March 30 - Evening Community Program for Youth and Adults - Douglasville, GA
Contact Us for More Information
The Cheating Game: 'Everyone's doing it,' from grade school to graduate school
Every day across America, millions of students from middle school to medical school face ethical quandaries--and research indicates that most choose to cheat. In a recent survey conducted by Who's Who Among American High School Students, 80 percent of high-achieving high schoolers admitted to having cheated at least once; half said they did not believe cheating was necessarily wrong--
and 95 percent of the cheaters said they have never been caught. According to the Center for Academic Integrity at Duke University, three quarters of college students confess to cheating at least once. And a new U.S. News poll found 90 percent of college kids believe cheaters never pay the price.

Crib sheets and copying answers are nothing new, of course. What's changed, experts maintain, is the scope of the problem: the technology that opens new avenues to cheat, students' boldness in using it, and the erosion of conscience at every level of education.

Academic fraud has never been easier. Students can tamper electronically with grade records, transmit quiz answers via pager or cell phone, and lift term papers from hundreds of Web sites. At the same time, an overload of homework combined with intense pressure to excel in school, from hard-driving peers and parents, makes cheating easy to justify--and hard to resist. Valedictorians are as likely to cheat as laggards, and girls have closed the gap with boys.

Competition for admission to elite colleges has transformed the high school years into a high-stakes race where top students compete for a spot on the sweet end of the curve. It has also spawned a new breed of perpetrator: the smart cheater. In the Who's Who survey, the country's top juniors and seniors talked about copying homework, plagiarizing, or otherwise cheating their way to the head of the class. "Grades are so important to these kids," sighs RevaBeth Russell, an advanced-placement biology teacher at Lehi High School in Utah, who has seen copying incidents skyrocket as collegebound students from prosperous families settle in the rural area.

The pressure to succeed, particularly on high-stakes tests, can drive students to consider extreme measures.

While crib notes and other time-honored techniques have yet to go out of style, advanced technology is giving slackers a new edge. The Internet provides seemingly endless opportunities for cheating, from online term-paper mills to chat rooms where students can swap science projects and math solutions. They also share test questions via E-mail between classes and hack into school mainframes to alter transcripts; they use cell phones to dial multiple-choice answers into alphanumeric pagers (1C2A3D) and store everything from algebra formulas to notes on Jane Eyre in cutting-edge calculators. Some devices even have infrared capabilities, allowing students to zap information across a classroom. "I get the sense there's a thrill to it, that 'my teachers are too dumb to catch me,' " says English teacher Connie Eberly.

"If [students] spent as much time on their studies as they do on cheating, we'd be graduating rocket scientists all over the place," says Larry McCandless, a science teacher at Hardee Junior High in Wauchula, Fla., who recently caught his students using sign language to signal test answers to each other.

If students do spend homeroom copying assignments from one another, it may be because schools send such mixed messages about what, exactly, constitutes crossing the line. Mark, a senior at a Northeastern boarding school, doesn't believe that doing homework with a friend--or a family member--is ever dishonest and blames the people at the head of the classroom for any confusion over collaboration. "I mean, some of my teachers say you can't do it, some say two minds are greater than one," he explains, breaking into a laugh. "I obviously agree with the latter."

Sue Bigg, a college consultant outside Chicago, often sees the hand of pushy parents. "I am beginning to think of myself in the role of 'integrity police'," she says, relating countless stories of college application essays that have been "edited" by Mom or Dad--and often for the worse, as big words replace any shred of youthful personality. "I'm afraid a lot of this cheating comes from home, where the parents' modus operandi is success at any cost."

The U.S. News poll found that 1 in 4 adults believes he has to lie and cheat to get ahead, and it seems this mentality is communicated to children. "Students see adults--parents, businessmen, lawyers--violating ethical standards and receiving a slap on the wrist, if anything, and quickly conclude that if that's acceptable behavior in the larger society, what's wrong with a little cheating in high school or college?" says Rutgers Professor McCabe. "Too often the messages from parents and teachers come off as, 'You need to do everything you can, at all costs, to get to the top.' You never see any gratification for being a good person anymore," says Audrey James, a senior at the North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics in Durham. "Once you get to high school, it's all about who has the grades and who's going to get the most scholarships."

It's clear that when students really care about learning, they're much less likely to cheat. Take Bob Corbett, for example. Though he details his years of making cheat sheets and paying people to take his AP exams in The Cheater's Handbook: The Naughty Student's Bible, Corbett insists that he never cheated in any subject he really cared about or in classes with inspiring instructors. In fact, he dedicated his book to the 11th-grade teacher who "did such a wonderfully engaging job that he destroyed any shred of desire I may ever have had to cheat in English thereafter. . . ."

Most cheaters don't get caught. In fact, perhaps the major reason students cheat is that they get away with it, time and time again. Numerous studies say that students almost never squeal on a classmate who cheats. And most instructors just don't want to play cop.

Still, a growing number of institutions are trying to turn discipline into a teachable moment. At the University of Maryland-College Park, for example, students caught cheating must attend a seven-week ethics seminar.

According to an exclusive U.S. News poll of 1,000 adults (including an oversample of 200 college students):

84% of college students believe they need to cheat to get ahead in the world today.

90% of college students say cheaters never pay the price; 90% say when people see someone cheating, they don't turn him in.

63% of college students say it's fair for parents to help with their kids' homework; 20% of adults think it's fair to do it.

Students say parental pressure (40%), peer pressure (40%), and the availability of new technology (31%) make them cheat.

Over 90% of college students say politicians cheat often. Who else do 90% think are cheaters? The media--and high schoolers.

- From US News


A Cheating Crisis in America's Schools
Lifting papers off the Internet is one of the newer trends in plagiarism — and technology is giving students even more ways to cheat nowadays.

Authoritative numbers are hard to come by, but according to a 2002 confidential survey of 12,000 high school students, 74 percent admitted cheating on an examination at least once in the past year.

In a six-month investigation, Primetime traveled to colleges and high schools across the country to see how students are cheating, and why. The bottom line is not just that many students have more temptation — but they seem to have a whole new mindset.

The real world is terrible," Joe, a college student in the Northeast told Primetime's Charles Gibson. "People will take other people's materials and pass it on as theirs. I'm numb to it already. I'll cheat to get by."

Primetime heard the same refrain from many other students who cheat: that cheating in school is a dress rehearsal for life. They mentioned President Clinton's Monica Lewinsky scandal and financial scandals like the Enron case, as well as the inconsistencies of the court system.

Mary, a student at a large university in the South, said, "A lot of people think it's like you're not really there to learn anything. You're just learning to learn the system."

Michael Josephson, founder of the Josephson Institute for Ethics, the Los Angeles-based organization that conducted the 2002 survey, said students take their lead from adults.

"They're basically decent kids whose values are being totally corrupted by a world which is sanctioning stuff that even they know is wrong. But they can't understand why everybody allows it."

Even if the world were more ethical, students still have reasons for cheating. Some said they cheat because they're graded on a curve — so that their score is directly affected by how other students do.

The pressure for good grades is high. "Grades can determine your future, and if you fail this then you're not going on to college, you're going to work at McDonald's and live out of a car," said high school student Spike.

Others see it as a sort of moral relativity. Some students feel it is perfectly OK to cheat in some situations and in some courses.

"You'll have an engineer say, 'You know, what do I need to know about English literature? I shouldn't have to take this course,' " said Don McCabe, a professor who heads the center for academic integrity at Rutgers University in New Jersey.

For Mary's classmate Pam, it was a different sort of prioritizing. "You don't want to be a dork and study for eight hours a day. You want to go out and have fun."

And some professors make it easy, students said. They overlook even the most obvious instances.

In fact, McCabe says, a survey of more than 4,000 U.S. and Canadian schools revealed half of all faculty members admitted ignoring cheating at least once.

Students today also have more technologically sophisticated cheating options open to them:

A favorite device is the graphing calculator, which most professors allow students to bring into an exam … and into which students can download all kinds of material.

Cell phones — to take pictures of notes, or among the more wily, to text-message friends for answers.

Even a two-way pager can be used to cheat. For one student whose campus has wireless Internet access, he used it as a mini-computer to access the entire Internet during his test.

And then there are Internet-based clearing houses for term papers, such as Papers4Less, Cheathouse.com and Schoolsucks.com.

Fortunately, educators have technological options too. Schools have been subscribing to a service called Turnitin.com, which can help teachers compare students' papers to all the available literature in its database.

"It's typically 30 percent of all the papers submitted have significant levels of plagiarism," said John Barrie, founder of Turnitin.com.

"We need to promote integrity. We need to get students to understand why integrity is important — as opposed to policing dishonesty and then punishing that dishonesty. Because they can beat the system," McCabe said.

Josephson emphasized that college teaches students many things: how to learn, behave, overcome challenges, and succeed.

"And if they approach it honestly, they'll learn far more in college than they think they can," he said. "But more than that, they'll come out of it better, stronger people."

- From ABC News

For Help with Other Teen Issues, Ask Susie


 
 
POWERFUL HELP WITH MOODY TEENS

Got a 10-13 year old girl in your life? "52 Ways to Protect Your Teen" is the perfect tool to survive her change in moods and attitudes!

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Study Finds Widespread Lying and Cheating among U.S. Teens
Many U.S. high school students lie a lot, cheat a lot and many show up for class drunk, according to preliminary results of a nationwide teen character study.

Seven in 10 students surveyed admitted cheating on a test at least once in the past year, and nearly half said they had done so more than once, according to the nonprofit Joseph & Edna Josephson Institute of Ethics.

"This data reveals a hole in the moral ozone," said Michael Josephson, founder and president of the Marina Del Rey-based organization.

The "Report Card on the Ethics of American Youth" found that 92 percent of the 8,600 students surveyed lied to their parents in the past year. Seventy-eight percent said they had lied to a teacher, and more than one in four said they would lie to get a job.

Nearly one in six students said they had shown up for class drunk at least once in the past year. Sixty-eight percent admitted they hit someone because they were angry. Nearly half -47 percent-said they could get a gun if they wanted to.

Josephson stopped short of assigning blame to a particular group, but he said parents, teachers and coaches need to pay special attention because they have the most significant interactions with youngsters.

"I'm not saying there aren't some out there doing their best," he said. "But if all three were doing their best, we wouldn't have this problem."

- From CNN.com


Wired for Cheating

Last winter, when some graduate business students at the University of Maryland at College Park accused classmates of cheating on a midterm exam, a group of professors decided to take matters into their own hands.

At the start of the final exam for "Principles of Accounting I," the team of professors who taught the popular course posted on its Web site an answer key loaded with false responses to the 30 multiple-choice questions. As some 400 students deliberated over their answers, the exam proctors sat and watched -- ignoring occasionally suspicious noises coming from a few cellphones, according to some of the test takers.

When the professors then compared each student's paper with the false key, they found that a dozen tests matched the fake answers almost exactly. According to Howard Frank, dean of the business school, there was only one reasonable explanation: 12 of the students had cheated.

The cellphone episode highlights what some professors and administrators say is a growing problem on their campuses:

More students are using cellphones, personal digital assistants, and Internet-connected laptops to cheat during exams.In small classrooms monitored by vigilant proctors, the devices offer few real opportunities for cheating. But in large courses like introductory accounting, technologies that were initially thought of as merely distracting are now more likely to be viewed as high-tech crib sheets.

With a cellphone or a PDA, an enterprising student can exchange notes with other exam takers, receive text messages from classmates outside the lecture hall, or search the Web. And the technology can make cheaters hard to spot.

In a recent survey, Jason Stephens, research assistant at the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, found that about two-thirds of high-school students admit to at least minor cheating on quizzes and tests, and he estimates that college students are not far behind. While most students acknowledge that cheating is wrong, many find ways to justify subterfuge in their own work, he says.

"Technology further facilitates that sort of rationalization," he says. "Students can say, 'Why should I be forced to memorize a fact or a formula when I'm going to have this information at my fingertips online?'' By the time most students get to college, he argues, they have already used the Internet, if not portable devices, to cut corners on tests and assignments.

- From the Chronicle of Higher Education


ADVANCED PLACEMENT STRESS
Parents need to recognize signs of excess stress in high-achieving teens. A heavy load of Advanced Placement classes can lead a teen to feel depressed or compelled to cheat for fear of not meeting a parent(s)’s expectations. If parents criticize their teen for imperfections on top of this heavy load, teens can feel as though they are never good enough.Too many high-achieving teens have shared with me that they have suicidal thoughts due to the pressures of critical parents or excessively high parental expectations, that become the teen’s expectations as well.

Consider your teen’s personality and don’t be afraid you’ll harm them or their future by reducing their load.
Consider reducing your teen’s load of AP classes by one or two less and increase the praise and acknowledgement of the things your teen does right each day. You may find your teen more productive and a far more fulfilled and well-rounded human being.

Read more about the impact of Stress on Teens and Family
Relations in my new book "52 Ways to Protect Your Teen - Guiding Teens to Good Choices and Success"

For your copy of "52 Ways to Protect Your Teen"


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"I was thrown out of college for cheating on the metaphysics exam; I looked into the soul of the boy sitting next to me.”
-Woody Alllen

Wishing you well,
All of us at LEGACY
Susie Vanderlip - Ken Vanderlip
Support Staff: Veronica Garcia - Keiko Trias - Vanessa Velasco
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