Article 3&4 Blog
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Title | Article 3&4 Blog |
Content | http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/17/education/students-accused-of-cheating-return-awkwardly-to-a-changed-harvard.html?pagewanted=all
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/01/opinion/sunday/women-bought-and-sold-in-nepal.html?_r=0
This article is a perfect example of
how even the most prestigious and
highest ranking schools are not
perfect. There is plagiarism in
almost every school and it has
different consequences in different
colleges and universities. Although
Harvard decided to accept back
some of the students but something similar is not guaranteed in every university or college. I believe that when a set of rules and a code of ethics is established for all the students to follow that set of rules and that code should be enforced at all times. An exception should not be tolerated because that will leave
room for other exceptions as well. If te students in Harvard found the
need to cheat in a take home test
so they would get ahead, who knows what kind of other measures they would take during their college experience to get ahead. Of course some used the excuse that the class they were taking became progressively more difficult to the point that it was not in the standards at which it was introduced to be at first and that is why the students found the need to take such measures on a take home test.
Well there are others in the world
that try to use different measures of gettng ahead which means taking steps that are against the rules. If we were to enlarge this ideal of getting ahead no matter the rules and ethics into a world scale problem we can redirect to the.selling of women in Nepal. The
traders of these women are trying
to make a profit and get ahead by
breaking the rules, much bigger
rules. Although prostitution
(voulantary or not) is known to be
the oldest proffession in the world
we still try to combat a major source of it, human trafficking, by
raising awareness and enforcing
the rules as much as possible. We
try to not allow any exceptions for
such a thing because a weak link
will allow for the rest of the trafficking to continue. In strong
and wealthy nations it might be
more difficult to bribe patrols and
officers whereas in India it is a lot
easier so human trafficking becomes easier.
No matter what rules are being bent or broken, there should be
consequences for each one of
those without any exceptions that
will create a weak link for the rest of the rule breaking and bending |
Excerpt | |
Footnotes |