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Korean Job Discussion Forums "The Internet's Meeting Place for ESL/EFL Teachers from Around the World!"
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AfroBurrito
Joined: 19 Dec 2013
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Posted: Wed Apr 23, 2014 11:02 pm Post subject: Cheating! Goodness, can no one work independently?!?!? |
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I don't know why I am surprised, I should be used to it after almost 3 cumulative years at this, but why, oh why do so many of these kids openly cheat on their assignments, vocabulary tests, and the like. It doesn't matter how often I insist they stop, they persist in blatantly copying one another's answers RIGHT IN FRONT OF ME!
I asked my Korean BF and he merely laughed off my irritation and claimed there was "nothing wrong with it." In his view it's a brand of cleverness and justifiable for an advantage.
I know cheating happens everywhere, but it feels so accepted here.
Rant, complete. |
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Okie from Muskogee
Joined: 30 Jan 2014
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Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 12:27 am Post subject: |
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I hear you. And visa and mastercard are accepted here as well.  |
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What the Book
Joined: 23 Apr 2012
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Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 12:49 am Post subject: Re: Cheating! Goodness, can no one work independently?!?!? |
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| AfroBurrito wrote: |
It doesn't matter how often I insist they stop, they persist in blatantly copying one another's answers RIGHT IN FRONT OF ME!
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A friend of mine who also taught in SK experimented with putting her students in groups of four and you know what happened next. At that, she put them in pairs, at which one of two things would happen. Either the kids would find out that they actually could do something on their own, or more often, activity would come to a complete standstill... because they didn't know who to copy from! |
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Sector7G
Joined: 24 May 2008
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Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 5:21 am Post subject: |
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Hey it's not only the younger students doing it. While I was reading KT for updates on the ferry tragedy, I saw this story.
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/opinon/2014/04/137_155566.html
Insufferable Moon a disgrace
He is a fighter, on the wrong side. / Korea Times file
By Jung Min-ho
Moon Dae-sung has been cast down from a Korean hero to a national disgrace, but the enormous personal shame has yet to affect his public standing.
The 37-year-old Incheon native with movie star looks once embodied everything an athlete could possibly wish for ― fame, fortune and adoring fans. This was after he won a taekwondo gold medal at the 2004 Athens Olympics via a flurry of knockouts, a rare display of dominance in a combat sport often accused of lacking excitement.
Moon was intent on milking every ounce of his Olympic glory for greater worldly gains. In 2008, he became the first Asian member of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Athletes Commission. In 2012, he became a lawmaker for President Park Geun-hye’s Saenuri Party.
In 2014, Moon is seen kicking and screaming amidst a dramatic fall from grace. Following a two-year investigation, Seoul’s Kookmin University canceled his Ph.D. in sports psychology last month because it found Moon’s thesis was a product of plagiarism.
Now, Moon is not the first high-profile Korean who cut-and-pasted their way toward undeserved academic credentials and social respect. But it is hard to remember any of the cheaters being insufferable as "Moondoricoh’’ ― a nickname coined after the popular Sindo-Ricoh copy machine ― who continues to test the public’s patience with his bald-faced lies and unrepentant attitude. |
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radish kimchi
Joined: 20 Mar 2014
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Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 5:47 am Post subject: |
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It's not just Korea yo wee yo. It is China also, yo wee yo!!!!
Why bitch mofo? Collect your paycheck and lick another month in Asian apartment territory. Don't worry, Americans and Russians won't invade. |
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drcrazy
Joined: 19 Feb 2003 Location: Pusan. Yes, that's right. Pusan NOT Busan. I ain't never been to no place called Busan
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Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 6:10 am Post subject: |
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| Sector7G wrote: |
Hey it's not only the younger students doing it. While I was reading KT for updates on the ferry tragedy, I saw this story.
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/opinon/2014/04/137_155566.html
Insufferable Moon a disgrace
He is a fighter, on the wrong side. / Korea Times file
By Jung Min-ho
Moon Dae-sung has been cast down from a Korean hero to a national disgrace, but the enormous personal shame has yet to affect his public standing.
The 37-year-old Incheon native with movie star looks once embodied everything an athlete could possibly wish for ― fame, fortune and adoring fans. This was after he won a taekwondo gold medal at the 2004 Athens Olympics via a flurry of knockouts, a rare display of dominance in a combat sport often accused of lacking excitement.
Moon was intent on milking every ounce of his Olympic glory for greater worldly gains. In 2008, he became the first Asian member of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Athletes Commission. In 2012, he became a lawmaker for President Park Geun-hye’s Saenuri Party.
In 2014, Moon is seen kicking and screaming amidst a dramatic fall from grace. Following a two-year investigation, Seoul’s Kookmin University canceled his Ph.D. in sports psychology last month because it found Moon’s thesis was a product of plagiarism.
Now, Moon is not the first high-profile Korean who cut-and-pasted their way toward undeserved academic credentials and social respect. But it is hard to remember any of the cheaters being insufferable as "Moondoricoh’’ ― a nickname coined after the popular Sindo-Ricoh copy machine ― who continues to test the public’s patience with his bald-faced lies and unrepentant attitude. |
The system for a PhD in Korea matches almost 100% that of the USA. And, for the Doctoral Dissertation, it is 100% the same, in all ways, including what is in each chapter, etc.
The doctoral candidate has to make a proposal to the dissertation committee. It needs to be something new/different. Then, eventually, with many changes finally all the members will be happy. Then, you write and rewrite, have it torn to pieces, put back together, over and over and over until FINALLY your committee says it is ready to defend. So, how can anyone just give them a document that someone else had already done???? The entire committee should be under investigation to see why (obviously) they did nothing but accept a finished document as it is. I know in some countries they do not see it until you are done. But Korea is just like the USA in every step of the dissertation process. Maybe this is why it was a 2 year investigation. Something is JUST NOT RIGHT. Take it from an American who did a PhD in USA and who has served on several PhD committees in Korea. |
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faeriehazel
Joined: 04 Mar 2008
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Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 4:07 pm Post subject: |
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| I had to read a bunch of Korean academic papers for my MA dissertation, alongside ones written in English by American profs (all on the same subject). I found a few instances of blatant plagiarism (by the Korean academics). I asked a few Korean profs about it but no one seemed to think it was a big deal. |
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Scorpion
Joined: 15 Apr 2012
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Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 5:06 pm Post subject: |
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One thing I've noticed. In my years of teaching in Korea I've never had a student decline help doing something. Not once has a student said, "It's okay teacher, I can do it." Even if it's just doing a word search puzzle. There is very little pride, it seems, in doing something by yourself. Cheating and copying is not frowned upon. In fact, my students often hand in their assignment and the copying is obvious - they've all made the exact same mistakes.
But copying is what Koreans do. |
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happiness
Joined: 04 Sep 2010
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Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 5:19 pm Post subject: |
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Some kids have been taught nowadays that copying is like not doing the work. I hear it in my class, but you always have to remember
Ive had kids to say they didnt need my help, they can do it. Ive seen it quite a bit. So, thats cool.
Modern Korea is a culture of social position not social repsonsiblity.
Its a little better now, but I dont think it will change, thats not Korea's Modus Operandi.
So, everything is a means to an end. Combine that with the idea of image more than inside and that makes for a dishonest culture in the eyes of a person from a Judeo-Christian ethic. I think its called the "white man's disease."
For my classes, I just make sure they dont do it, but if one kid is really slow, I may look the other way, to keep the class moving, but that doesnt make it "morally right." I do like it when the kid who is cheating is proud and says I finished!
These kids are bred from day 1 to be competitive, and for the NET, thats good, they mostly come with a pre-installed vocabulary of some English words and more modern Korean English words (not Konglish.) Much easier to work now. But I dont think for a minute I can stop their competition, thats not my Modus Operandi. When they get older, they will react to all of that, I think mostly the girls becoming more open minded and removing the shackles, and the boys, well, trapped in their filial piety and cronyism. Its kind of grim, but its my opinion.
I have a job to do, and its teach here, not to instill my values by force, but by example. No? |
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drcrazy
Joined: 19 Feb 2003 Location: Pusan. Yes, that's right. Pusan NOT Busan. I ain't never been to no place called Busan
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Posted: Thu Apr 24, 2014 11:08 pm Post subject: |
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| faeriehazel wrote: |
| I had to read a bunch of Korean academic papers for my MA dissertation, alongside ones written in English by American profs (all on the same subject). I found a few instances of blatant plagiarism ( | | | |