Just about any kid knows that instant term papers can be acquired for a fee at Web sites like SchoolSucks.com, Papers4Less.com, EssayTown.com, and GeniusPapers.com. “Some even sell admissions essays for college applications,” the Sacramento Bee reports. The article sites a study finding that “50% of 4,500 students surveyed at 25 high schools said they had engaged in some level of plagiarism on written assignments by using the Internet.” Besides the ethical issues, there are serious risks to the academic careers of students who use these services, because many educators are on to this services and know how to detect purchased work and cut ‘n’ paste plagiarism. And now legislation – in California, at least – may ensue. A lawmaker there wants to send a message to these sites catering to academic laziness, according to the Bee. “Assemblyman Dennis Mountjoy, R-Monrovia, fed up with online cheating, has proposed legislation to bar profiteers from selling, distributing, or writing term papers for buyers to submit for high school credit.” An assemblywoman on the Democratic side of the aisle agrees that these sites are cheating children out of education. Civil libertarians disagree, and the resulting debate is one of the typical free-speech vs. regulation discussions that the Internet stirs up at every level of government.
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