• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

WCF

History, politics, and culture articles and forum discussions.

You are here: Home / Topics / A joke on my students

- By

A joke on my students

Home › Forums › Off Topic › A joke on my students

  • This topic has 4 voices and 2 replies.
Viewing 4 posts - 1 through 4 (of 4 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • April 23, 2011 at 2:58 pm #2775 Reply
    Phidippides
    Keymaster

    In the survey course that I teach, I offer my students extra credit by responding to questions I post online about things we've talked about in class or which are in the text.  I have noticed that some of the responses are a bit too “refined” for informal online discussion, and a search has revealed copying or pasting, or taking from places such as Wikipedia.  I keep thinking back to when Scout mentioned how he modified that Wikipedia article on Charlemagne to state that he was a black man.  It has crossed my mind that I could modify some Wikipedia entry to say something false, yet believable, and then pose a question to my students who will inevitably use the entry as their source.  I could then see how many people fall for it.  Funny joke, eh?  It would, of course, be a great lesson to them about the clear dangers of using Wikipedia for such information.  Ok, ok, so I don't think I would do this, but it's kind of tempting.  ;D

    April 23, 2011 at 3:38 pm #24663 Reply
    Vulture6
    Participant

    Ok, ok, so I don't think I would do this, but it's kind of tempting.  ;D

    Come on, please?I'd love to see the reactions.  Besides, they might actually learn something!

    April 23, 2011 at 8:00 pm #24664 Reply
    skiguy
    Moderator

    I think you should do it too.  I bet the students who get caught won't be plagiarizing much after that.

    April 24, 2011 at 8:19 pm #24665 Reply
    scout1067
    Participant

    I too, fall into the camp of thinking you should do this.  If nothing else, it should teach some students a lesson about intellectual rigor vs. laziness.  I also think you should publicly embarrass those that do it, but then again, I am old-school like that.  I firmly believe that embarrassment is an excellent learning experience.

  • Author
    Posts
Viewing 4 posts - 1 through 4 (of 4 total)
Reply To: A joke on my students
Your information:




Primary Sidebar

Login

Log In
Register Lost Password

Blog Categories

Search blog articles

Before Footer

  • Did Julian the Apostate’s plan ever have a chance?

    Julian the Apostate stands as an enigmatic figure among Roman emperors, ascending to power in 361 AD …

    Read More

    Did Julian the Apostate’s plan ever have a chance?
  • The Babylonian Bride

    Marriage customs in Ancient Babylon Ancient Babylonia was a society, which, although it did not …

    Read More

    The Babylonian Bride
  • The fall of Athens

    In 407 B.C. and again in 405 B.C.. the Spartans in alliance with their old enemies, the Persians, …

    Read More

    The fall of Athens

Footer

Posts by topic

2016 Election Alexander Hamilton American Revolution archaeology Aristotle Ben Franklin Black Americans Charles Dickens Christianity Christmas Constantine Custer's Last Stand Egypt email engineering England forum security Founding Fathers France future history George Washington Germany Greece hacker Hitler Industrial Revolution Ireland James Madison Jewish medieval military history Paleolithic philosophy pilgrimage Rome Russia SEO Slavery Socrates spammer technology Trump World War I World War II Year In Review

Recent Topics

  • Midsummer Night: June 25th
  • Testing out a new feature
  • Did Julian the Apostate’s plan ever have a chance?
  • Release of the JFK Files
  • What was the greatest military advancement of all time?

RSS Ancient News

Recent Forum Replies

  • Going to feature old posts
  • What’s new?
  • Testing out a new feature
  • Testing out a new feature
  • Testing out a new feature

Copyright © 2025 · Contact

Insert/edit link

Enter the destination URL

Or link to existing content

    No search term specified. Showing recent items. Search or use up and down arrow keys to select an item.