cheating your way through high school..

<p>hey, i'm in AP Lit. i see the bullcrap. i usually don't agree with it, but i see it.</p>

<p>and the answer is B.</p>

<p>I think "this asian" knows what he's doing. I don't actually considering any of it cheating. Again like in one of my posts I said I have interesting morals.
The crux of the argument is "screw society. It's fine as long as I can live with it." </p>

<p>I've noticed this type of cheating is more prevalent in other schools. Agree disagree?</p>

<p>And... I wholeheartedly agree with Cono. The people who buy their grades will fail later because they lack the basic skills to do it themselves. I believe that from the administration's standpoint. He should be expelled only because he is doing business when he's supposed to be learning. Unfortunately his method of business is helping cheaters cheat so eh.</p>

<p>"This asian" knows what he is doing all right: illegal business. This kind of systematic cheating, and yes it is cheating, is now over the top. He is not only getting good grades, but also (lots?) money for it! I understand cheating sporadically and not saying anything, but this is outrageous. Humans need at least some moral and dignity.</p>

<p>Edit: OP if you want to "resolve" this issue, you should find someone that will snitch on him. Don't go to the administration because most likely, your name is not going to remain anonymous.</p>

<p>Cheating is everywhere, the person you described. There is at least one at every school. It really isn't a big deal, first semester of college for those people might be a wake up call. </p>

<p>Another thing to consider, you have to be smart to cheat, a regular dumbass may be able to copy someone's answers to homework, but cheating like that (OP person) requires smarts and various organization skills. He got caught once, I doubt he'll get caught again (unless someone tips the school off and they can prove it).</p>

<p>Haha.</p>

<p>When the student in question decided to cheat, he also decided to risk being reported. The risk is countered with the fact that he knows he only runs a slim chance of another student reporting him.</p>

<p>So my question is, if the OP is so concerned and outraged by this rampant cheating going on, why hasn't he reported the culprit? Cheating of this scale can only exist as long as tolerance from individual students also exists.</p>

<p>Forget questioning the cheater's morality. If cheating the system is to be defined as immoral, the OP is just as guilty of immorality.</p>

<p>It's all about limits. You have to know limits and where you have to draw the line. If you tell yourself you won't go past a certain limit then you could possibly get through life with cheating.</p>

<p>its funny cause all this moral stuff comes up about cheating. truthfully, i dnt care either way, i dnt let cheaters bother me, honestly i find them funny. If they chest their way through, good for them, i dnt really care, if their earn their grades i dnt care either.</p>

<p>Haha the thing about 'your cheating comes back to bite you when you're unprepared for college/real world' doesn't apply to this guy because he helped other people cheat, instead of cheating himself. So he's smart enough to fend for himself, he's just setting up a whole bunch of other people to fail in college/ the real world. ^^</p>

<p>thats pretty bad... things dontlook too good for him.</p>

<p>
[quote]
hey, i'm in AP Lit. i see the bullcrap. i usually don't agree with it, but i see it.

[/quote]
</p>

<p>Heh, so do I...although I try to repress my acknowledgment of what is "implied."</p>

<p>glschneck, it will bother you when a cheater gets into the college of your choice because this cheater had "better" grades than you did. </p>

<p>I don't understand why some of you think that the cheater's ability to do the work condones his systematic cheating. That's like saying, "It's ok for a robber to steal money from a bank because he could have made the same amount of money working a regular job."</p>

<p>^^^ </p>

<p>In that analogy, the victim is actually losing something. A kid cheating in school doesn't lose anyone anything.</p>