Only a few stories from recently, but they're good ones
We write government documents now?
Two students got pulled up for plagiarism, both of whom had work that was fairly similar to each other, but not quite enough for it to be considered out and out "collusion". Both of them however, had the same issue that resulted in them getting smacked with a plagiarism warning on their record.
The issue in their case was the fact that they had taken stuff from government guidelines (this was for one of our short courses) to work on their project (the project in question was preparing something for a mock client and they also needed to write a rationale) and not cited it. At all. While they did at least include it in their bibliography, you still need to cite government sources!
That's one way to appeal...
One of the appeals that's coming through is for a student who failed their course and failed it pretty badly. We received the actual appeal today - she spent a good chunk of it quoting a theory around education in the field she was studying.
We have very specific guidelines for appeal and she did not address these at all. Super manager promptly sent that back and quoted the grounds again. I was feeling kind of crummy so I didn't do this, but I was solely tempted to ask super manager if the student had at least cited her sources!
This is why we take notes...
We also have ANOTHER student who's appealing a fail grade, this one from them failing their clinical placement. They had a meeting with Super Manager and during it, it came out that apparently the mentor who assessed them disappeared for around 2-3 hours.
While we will be investigating that further, there are copious amounts of notes to back up the student's fail grade, so the grade will likely not be changing.
We write government documents now?
Two students got pulled up for plagiarism, both of whom had work that was fairly similar to each other, but not quite enough for it to be considered out and out "collusion". Both of them however, had the same issue that resulted in them getting smacked with a plagiarism warning on their record.
The issue in their case was the fact that they had taken stuff from government guidelines (this was for one of our short courses) to work on their project (the project in question was preparing something for a mock client and they also needed to write a rationale) and not cited it. At all. While they did at least include it in their bibliography, you still need to cite government sources!
That's one way to appeal...
One of the appeals that's coming through is for a student who failed their course and failed it pretty badly. We received the actual appeal today - she spent a good chunk of it quoting a theory around education in the field she was studying.
We have very specific guidelines for appeal and she did not address these at all. Super manager promptly sent that back and quoted the grounds again. I was feeling kind of crummy so I didn't do this, but I was solely tempted to ask super manager if the student had at least cited her sources!

This is why we take notes...
We also have ANOTHER student who's appealing a fail grade, this one from them failing their clinical placement. They had a meeting with Super Manager and during it, it came out that apparently the mentor who assessed them disappeared for around 2-3 hours.

While we will be investigating that further, there are copious amounts of notes to back up the student's fail grade, so the grade will likely not be changing.
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