Saturday, April 3, 2010

“[Ads by Yahoo!] University of Phoenix Online College” plus 2 more

“[Ads by Yahoo!] University of Phoenix <b>Online</b> College” plus 2 more


Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.

[Ads by Yahoo!] University of Phoenix <b>Online</b> College

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‘Essay factory’ offers 2:1 <b>degree</b> or your cash back

Posted: 03 Apr 2010 04:42 PM PDT

IT is the academic equivalent of "phone a friend". Students are being sold foolproof dissertations written for them with a cashback guarantee if they fail to get at least a 2:1 degree.

Instead of burning the midnight oil, all the students have to do is put the cost on their credit card. The company selling the service also says its contributors can ghost-write a first-class version of the essay for £1,440. An MA dissertation will cost up to £15,000.

The offers by the website UKEssays.com are the latest evidence of the growth of "essay mills", widely condemned as cheating aids. The firms claim they do not encourage dishonesty and say they tell students to use the essays as a "resource" and not hand them in.

The tailor-made work is becoming increasingly popular as universities become better at detecting direct plagiarism from the internet.

Most universities now use anti-plagiarism software to scan work that students submit, but they have done little to combat the essay mills.

UKEssays.com promises to put the completed essay through its own anti-plagiarism scanner to make sure it cannot be detected.

The firm is among the most successful of the essay mills. Its parent company, Academic Answers Ltd, recently reported profits of £241,598 for the year ending November 30, 2008. Its founder, Barclay Littlewood, 31, a qualified solicitor, has an estimated fortune of some £7m, according to The Sunday Times Young Rich List.

The company claims to have 4,000 contributors, ranging from serving lecturers to solicitors, retired doctors and recent graduates, who write the essays on behalf of students.

It says it has regular customers from universities including Durham and York. It claims none of the essays it recently provided for 240 students at Nottingham and Nottingham Trent universities to pilot its new guarantee was detected.

Many university degrees now award all marks — or nearly all — through coursework and dissertations rather than final exams, making them vulnerable to students plagiarising work or buying essays online.

Last week a Sunday Times researcher posing as an Edinburgh University undergraduate asked the company about providing a final-year dissertation and essays for a course in English literature and classics.

A member of staff at UKEssays.com told her that a 6,000-word dissertation, which would count towards her final degree, would cost £1,440 at first-class standard and £720 for a 2:1. She advised that students should not try buying essays that were of an improbably high standard.

Tony Eynon, managing director of UKEssays.com, based in Nottingham, said the new guarantee was a "real breakthrough in contemporary academia".

Bahram Bekhradnia, director of the Higher Education Policy Institute, a think tank, said: "It is potentially very serious and undermines the whole fabric of higher education."

Additional reporting: Rebecca Burns

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Oldest Lynn University undergrad aiming for psychology <b>degree</b>

Posted: 03 Apr 2010 11:06 AM PDT

By Jessica Poitevien

Sun-Sentinel Staff Writer

— College freshman Jack Slotnick's midterm report card shows an A, two grades of A-, one B and one C.

It's something any full-time student would be proud of, but Slotnick isn't the average college student.

At age 84, the World War II Purple Heart veteran is the oldest undergraduate student in Lynn University Bachelor's, master's & online degrees's history, according to a Lynn spokeswoman.

"Sometimes when I look at the students, I can't believe I'm as old as I am," Slotnick said. "Some of the students thought I was the professor when I walked into one of my classes."

After retiring from a successful career in the vacuum cleaner and lawn mowing businesses, Slotnick felt the need to finish what he started more than 60 years ago at Brooklyn College.

"Everybody I know has one or two degrees, so I looked in the mirror about six months ago and I said, 'You really are a dumb-dumb. You don't have a degree,'" he said.

With that realization, he applied to Lynn and was accepted as a psychology major. At his current pace, Slotnick will graduate with a bachelor of science degree late next year.

People like Slotnick are rare. Only a handful of older people continue their education.

A 2009 survey by AARP found that only 16 percent of people age 50 and older said they are likely to return to school. Of those participants age 65 and older, that number was only 7 percent.

"I think only Jack can do this. I've never met anyone like him," said Amanda Gross, who sits next to Slotnick in psychology class.

Robert Seifer, Slotnick's psychology professor, gives his oldest student no special treatment, but still understands his unique situation.

"I give Jack a ton of credit for being 84 years old and coming back to learn and experience the traditional college classroom," he said.

Slotnick has definite plans for his psychology degree: "I'm going to be the oldest practicing psychologist in the U.S."

His goal is to earn a master's degree and offer free counseling to returning military veterans.

"I think I can relate better to a returning veteran than somebody who has no concept of what being a soldier is," Slotnick said.

He wants to work through veteran organizations to help the vets transition to civilian life and reduce what he said is an alarming suicide rate among returning servicemen and -women.

"Evidently there is more stress or strain on the soldiers of today than when I was in the war," Slotnick said. "There is something drastically wrong with the amount of suicides [among] the current group of soldiers."

Slotnick's goal is to help his fellow veterans, but that's not the only benefit he'll get from it.

"Brain exercises, such as what you would get from taking classes, are wonderful stimulation," said Dr. Leilani Doty, director of the University of Florida Cognitive and Memory Disorders Clinics.

As people age, many deal with memory loss and slower problem-solving skills, she said. Stimulation is key to delaying the brain's atrophy, and over time both short- and long-term memory may improve.

"If you don't use it, you'll lose it," Doty said.

Other than some difficulties with technology, Slotnick said, his age hasn't affected his schoolwork.

"The only disadvantage I have right now are the technical points of the computer," he said. "I'm taking a computer course, so I'm really getting into the 21st century."

Slotnick looks forward to making his goals a reality.

"I can't wait to do the work properly and get my degree," he said.

His family is supportive and enjoys how the tables have turned. "I'm glad I'm passing my classes," Slotnick said. "My children want me to maintain if not a 4.0, at least a 3.5 average."

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