EDUCATION: A Response on Plagiarism

Just received a comment from someone whom I’d quoted via an article in one of my posts on the education system and today’s students and want to highlight it here as it has somewhat restored my faith in mankind, even as it points out another failing:

It is I- XXX, here to respond to you’re misled beliefs on this story. First of all, its true that I contacted an essay website, I was in a panic, and I wanted to give it a try. I never had any intention of turning in the paper custom-written for me because that would obviously be plagiarism. I was hoping that it would spur some ideas of my own because I was having a huge mental blank. The day after I hired the service, I wrote the paper myself and got a top 3 grade in the class. I realized that I do have the confidence and ability to write a good paper. Yes, I was wrong for attempting to ask someone to do my work for me, but hey I made a mistake, and I learned from it. My problem is with this reporter-Thomas Bartlett who like most reporters, never accurately record quotes. I NEVER said that it was acceptable to have someone research for you. Furthermore, I did not say I defend the idea of paid research either. This reporter took some of my words out of context and embellished it with his own words to prove his point. Talk about ethics, this reporter needs to check himself out. My professor actually refused to be included in this article because he thought the reporter had suspicious techniques for gaining and reporting information. In conclusion, I do not condone academic paid research or false statements by obnoxious reporters. I learned that reporters are like rappers- you can’t believe everything they say (they might be high on something).

I apologize to XXX as he claims he has been misquoted by the reporter and I believe that it is highly likely to be the case. And knowing that XXX is majoring in philosophy and religion, I would think that his intentions are pure and that the inexperience and judgment of youth had been the mitigating factors in his decisions and are highly forgivable.

However, I might suggest that this same youth factor has affected his reaction here as well in his suggestions that “Thomas Bartlett, who like most reporters, never accurately record quotes” and “I learned that reporters are like rappers- you can’t believe everything they say (they might be high on something).” would indicate a sweeping generalization and stereotyping of reporters (and rappers) that he no doubt instinctively finds as distasteful as plagiarism and twisting of facts in reporting. I’m also a bit wary of the excuse of “panic” and a “huge mental blank,” but I’m a hard-ass on cheating but have faith that XXX is on the right track.  As many philosophers have noted, there cannot be good without evil, and sometimes we all have to taste the bad to convince ourselves rather than believe someone else’s word–which as XXX has noted, cannot always be believed.

So thank you, XXX, I appreciate your honesty and willingness to come forward and wish you the best of success in all your achievements both at James Madison and your promising career ahead.

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LITERATURE: Chekhov’s Excellent People

Within this story of a man’s preferred connections to the literary communities there is a relationship between his sister and him that begs attention. A disillusioned and heartbroken woman, Vera Semyonovna spends her time pondering the meaning of life.

“I’ve been haunted by a strange idea since yesterday. I keep wondering where we should all be if human life were ordered on the basis of non-resistance to evil?”

An interesting thought, and her brother cannot come up with an answer that puts her mind at ease. She cannot forget it and a short time later,

“You are probably right, but it seems to me, I feel something false in our resistance to evil, as though there were something concealed or unsaid. God knows, perhaps our methods of resisting evil belong to the category of prejudices which have become so deeply rooted in us, that we are incapable of parting with them, and therefore cannot form a correct judgement of them.”

Her logic carries it to a conclusion:

“Perhaps man is mistaken in thinking that he is obliged to resist evil and has a right to do so, just as he is mistaken in thinking, for instance, that the heart looks like an ace of hearts.  It is very possible in resisting evil we ought not to use force, but to use what is the very opposite of force–if you, for instance, don’t want this picture stolen from you, you ought to give it away rather than lock it up.”

Chekhov has a knack for recognizing the diversity in human thinking. He makes the lady’s theory clear and concise, and yet while we may (or may not, granting that many believe this very thing) see it as illogical, it is presented in true and honest form, exactly as our adversaries do. What Chekhov is showing us is realism.

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REALITY?: Sundays

I love it on a Sunday morning as I cut my husband’s hair and think of ages past and scissors held by the different hands through time. Mother as a barber and a stylist both; up to date on Sassoons and Wedge; thick and thin hair, coarse and baby fine, adding sons-in-law and sisters to the clientele. Eventually the need to take over just as Alzheimers had taken over all the rest of her. She taught me well, and father, mother, husband, sisters, in-laws, friends, and neighbors, sat beneath my flashing blades. So important that the finest German pair of scissors costing hundreds was an acceptable gift beneath a Christmas tree. And my own hair I can cut.

I remember the first time that I cut my own, after practicing on all my dolls. Mother so angry with the inch-long bangs I thought were great she woke my father from his morning sleep after a hard night’s shift as factory foreman. Towards the end she let me cut her hair but never did I get it shaped as well as she used to do herself. And sometimes I still let her cut mine, thinking maybe it was something that would jog a memory. Or maybe I just needed to hold on too.

So today I cut my husband’s hair, and as I shook the cover out into the wind and watched the hair catch in the shrubs, I thought of nests it would line to softly warm another family growing strong to fly away.

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LITERATURE: Chekhov’s Short Stories

One thing I’ve always loved about Chekhov is how he homes in on the simplest aspects of human nature or human interaction and makes it important.

In The Kiss, with an entire army and a military scenario, the focus is upon a man’s loneliness and his dreams of love based on an instant in which a strange woman unknowingly kisses him rather than her lover as expected in a dark room. In Verotchka, we have a studious young man–though at 29 he doesn’t know love. The story opens with him enjoying the recall of good fortune in spending time with a family who has been more than good to him during his stay. As he is leaving, his kind thoughts of his host’s 21 year-old daughter are turned into mass confusion as she professes her love. It is so simple, so intimate, these problems that Chekhov’s writes about and yet they are something that while encompassing the nature of all mankind, need no drama of global war, famine, illness or strife of any kind over that one on one human connection.

One more thing I’ve realized is a tying together of two completely different stories and cast of characters by detail. In Verotchka:

Ivan Alexeievitch Ogneff well recollects an August evening when he opened noisily the hall door and went out on the terrace with a light cloak and a wide-brimmed straw hat–the very hat which now, beside his top-boots lies in the dust underneath his bed.

And from The Match, as the officials break into the bedroom of the suspected murder victim,Marcus Ivanovitch Klausoff:

Beside the bed, the little table, and the single chair, there was no furniture in the room. Looking under the bed, the inspector saw a couple of dozen empty bottles, and old straw hat and a quart of vodka. Under the table lay one top boot, covered with dust.

I, of course, wonder at the meaning of the hat and boots that Chekhov has brought into each story. Is it a detail that just has stuck itself into his mind and comes out in his writing? It would seem that the head to toe coverings might indicate something more metaphorical. Or it could just be where Chekhov normally stored his hat and boots when he slept.

I’ll need to do a bit of research to find out the dates these two stories were first written or published; that may bear some clue as to meaning or it may indicate no intent of any particular meaning at all.

Another thing I note here is that even as Ishiguro’s writing in The Unconsoled is something like Chekhov’s in it’s formality, I find Chekhov’s so much easier to read and find that my interest in the characters is more easily established even as nothing dramatic or fast-paced is happening.

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CURRENT AFFAIRS: Money Goes where Money Knows

I don’t care about the political connections or the somewhat obscene amounts of money paid out; it became the norm and hopefully this can change across all sectors, not just in the business world.

WASHINGTON – Lawrence H. Summers, the top economic adviser to President Obama, earned more than $5 million last year from the hedge fund D. E. Shaw and collected $2.7 million in speaking fees from Wall Street companies that received government bailout money, the White House disclosed Friday in releasing financial information about top officials.  (msnbc/nytimes)

But it does tell me something interesting about why this administration of millionaires is so free with the spending. Especially when it’s somebody else’s money. While they should know better, they appear to have no concept of billion or trillion, or for that matter, the average lower wage earner’s salary of more around $30,000 per year.

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BLOGGING & CODE: Redirect

Well I had wiped out Hypercompendia over at Typepad, but put it back temporarily to use as a redirect if I can do with it what I’ve done with Spinning. I’ve managed to change the Spinning main index template to linger just a couple seconds on the main page before it redirects over to Spinning here at WordPress. I know how to do it, but have to re-upload the banner image to Hypercompendia to make it work I think. I’d supposedly deleted all the files, but I believe they’re still on the server.

What’s more important is to somehow make that work on the archives, individual post files and that’s something I haven’t figured out how to access yet. The Typepad permalink templates are hidden from me, so all I have to work with is the tags, such as <$MTEntryPermalink$>and I may have the nerve to fiddle with that before I just wipe out the weblogs permanently.

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CURRENT AFFAIRS: Data vs. Statistics

This is likely why people get all screwed up over statistics:

The unemployment rate and related data are calculated based on a monthly survey of about 60,000 U.S. households. The survey asks a series of questions to determine whether household residents who are 16 years old or older are employed, unemployed or not in the labor force.  (msnbc)

Isn’t 60,000 households rather a small number to be fudging figures that amount to 13.2 million unemployed? Yes, I’ve taken Statistics and know that there’s a kernal of truth as a basis to form these guesstimates, but in times like this, I hardly think that this small portion of American households is representative of the country. It’s likely that unemployment compensation figures along with recently (within 6 months) of those losing benefits, or company data might project a more accurate figure.

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REALITY & WRITING: Editing

Uh-oh. It seems that my sharpened eye has leaked into my ear and I find myself finding the flaws with tv shows and commercials.

Just saw the Hallmark talking card ad: a woman, surrounded by her family at a dinner table, opens a birthday card from her sister and is surprised by an audio clip in her sister’s voice saying something like, “You’re the best sister, wish I could be there…” and one of the men at the table says, “I was just going to say that.”  Duh?

Another ad by some new clothing store that starts with a K was a visual transcript of an audio 911 call wherein a woman complains that she’s being robbed because she gave them money and all she got was clothes. Uh, didn’t anyone from the company listen to this before it went on air? What does this really say about the quality or price of the clothes?  They don’t air this ad any more, but the new one’s not much better.

Am I just getting crankier with age or are writers getting sloppier?

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EDUCATION & WRITING: More Good News!

While I think I’ve neglected to properly acknowledge the accomplishments of Carolyn in getting into a special writing program at Vassar, I’d like to congratulate her now along with a big hip-hooray for Mary Ellen and her achievement of acceptance into the prestigious Writing Associates Program at Trinity.

Despite the general doom and gloom of lost jobs and the poor economy, it seems to be a good year for writers, and for these two ladies, along with Steve’s poetry being published, Lonnie Ann’s acceptance at her choice of art schools, and Josh & Kas’ good fortune, I’m really happy.

Yeah, and maybe a tad jealous.

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WRITING: Also caught this…

… in the local The Valley Press, from a writeup on an event:

…, a native of South Carolina, has written scores for musicals that have been produced in London, New York and other cities in between.”

Ahah! They must have found Atlantis under the Atlantic Ocean just where the legends said it’d be.

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LITERATURE: More on National Poetry Month

Caught this in our local The Valley Press (CT):

River Literary Arts Center, 40 Mill Lane, Farmington (CT) will offer the Poet’s Craft – A Writer’s Workshop four Mondays, April 6, 13, 20, and 27 from 7 t0 8:30 p.m. The workshop will cover the technical aspects of poetry. Improve one’s use of sound sense, imagery, form and figurative language. The Workshop leader will be Ted Guhl, published poet, educator and artist.

Register (sic) fee is $150. Make checks payable to FRLAC. For more info call 677-9662, or visit http://frlac.org.

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BLOGGING: Personality

Decided that the soft coral waves didn’t truly suit my personality except perhaps for about an hour in the early morning around five to six a.m.

This is a bit more me; same angles and round edges, but photoshopped a bit more and some pizzazz with intensity of color. This is more like I’ve been lately for the majority of each day.

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CURRENT AFFAIRS: On Bailouts and Bubbles

While I’ve never really thought along the same lines as anyone else I knew or anything I’d read, it wasn’t just a spirit of rebellion or a  stubborn streak I don’t think. I’d like to say it’s just a different angle. For example, I don’t really believe this whole “housing bubble” term.

It’s true that real estate sort of simmered and then suddenly boiled over like spaghetti sauce just when you think you’ve turned the flame down to a point where you can walk away, but I don’t believe that prices exploded out of sync with the rest of commodities. Forty years ago (approximately), my sister and her husband bought a house for $40,000 and just before this crisis it was valued at $400,000. That’s in keeping with the price of a ’69 VW Beetle which was $1,800 (I went for the convertible which was $2,500) and the new one is $18,920.  A sandwich roll was $.05, now I’m paying $.59. A quart of milk was $.25. Chicken was $.19/lb and hamburger $.29. I used jumbo shrimp (now called ‘super colossal’ at 6-8 per pound) for my stuffed shrimp at $1.69/lb. vs. current  price of $17.99/lb.

Do you notice a trend here? Prices on all items have all gone up approximately 10 times. So how is the cost of real estate any more ridiculous than the cost of anything else?

Well there lies the problem. My first job in an office as a order clerk typist paid $60/week. That’s $1.50 per hour and minimum wage was $1.25.  Minimum wage will be raised to $7.25 in July of this year, but that’s a far cry from a 10-times rate of $12.50. Even with this obvious lack of cost of living increase in salary to keep up, many workers are indeed beyond that barrier to be bringing in salaries of  $25,000 to $65,000 that are well in keeping with the times, coupled with the fact that there are more two-earner households than there were forty, fifty years ago.

The problem then appears to be the failure of the minimum wage to keep up.  That, and the acceptance of illegal workers which keeps earnings even below that point. I think that if government is to have any say in how businesses operate, that should be a priority. The next step, of course, would be to penalize companies who attempt to avoid paying workers reasonably (though I do see labor union jobs often out of control earnings-wise) by moving production to foreign soil.

So were the housing costs out of sight? I don’t think so. Were mortgages given out indiscriminately to unqualified buyers? Yes. Under pressure from government good intent to help lower income earners to afford housing, and to cater to promising up and comers who bought mansions they worked too long hours to spend much time enjoying,  the housing market was brought down. But was it a problem of overevaluation? I don’t think so.

But then, I always have seen things from a different angle.

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LITERATURE: The Unconsoled – Language & Pace

It’s really embarrassing to me how slow I’m reading this book. While I’ve been involved in hypertext writing and coding for same, that’s really not an excuse for not allowing some reading time, and this story just hasn’t kept me coming back at a regular rate or impel me to read more than a couple pages at a time.

First there’s the language. Now the writing is indeed clean but even from one who’s writing had once been called Byzantine Ishiguro’s prose is a tad stilted and old fashioned:

Naturally I too had been taking the opportunity to observe Brodsky quite carefully. He had been placed at the table a little larger than the rest. Hoffman was to one side of him, the Countess on the other. The rest of his company comprised a ring of solemn grey-haired men. The way these latter seemed continuously to be conferring under their breaths gave the table a conspiratorial air hardly helpful to the general atmosphere. (p. 138)

The only thing I can get excited about is that I, like Ishiguro, prefer to spell ‘grey’ with an ‘e’.

The pace is not exactly flying as we are still building up to this event and yet do not quite know why the whole town is molding Brodsky as their hometown ‘celebrity’ nor what Ryder’s role is in this scenario. I was flicking with the idea that all are metaphors but in trying to pin down that meaning, I’ve lost interest in the story.

But I’ve passed the 50-page rule, so I shall slog onward.

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LITERATURE: Some Poetical Links

Today starts National Poetry Month and I’d like to point out some resources that should satisfy the most needy of poetical spirit. Read, Write, Think has a pageful of ideas and links to inspire; Poets, Org. has much to offer–check out the poem-a-day via email; Writinghood has an excellent article on explaining the parts and different types of poems; a group of friends has committed to offering a poem a day through April at Poemaddiction.

Read a poem, write a poem, get into the soothing mood of the language. Enjoy!

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