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Article on paying to get college essays written

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shindigs
Profile Blog Joined May 2009
United States4795 Posts
November 17 2010 19:23 GMT
#1
http://chronicle.com/article/article-content/125329/

The chronicle posted an articled called "The Shadow Scholar" in which an anonymous writer talks about getting paid by college students from all over who ask him to write their essays for them, for a price of course. The interesting part to me is that this extends even to the levels of PhD thesises (thesi?) where grad students cannot write for the life of them.

In the article, he admits that he is one of the reasons of failing ethics in the academic system, but also draws interesting points toward how the system is organized and how it encourages such behavior with people who have cash to spare. Anyway, read for yourself!

Thanks to krazymunky on tl who posted it on fb and i stole it lol

+ Show Spoiler +
The Shadow Scholar
The man who writes your students' papers tells his story
5713-Dante

Jonathan Barkat for The Chronicle Review
Enlarge Image
close 5713-Dante

Jonathan Barkat for The Chronicle Review

By Ed Dante

Editor's note: Ed Dante is a pseudonym for a writer who lives on the East Coast. Through a literary agent, he approached The Chronicle wanting to tell the story of how he makes a living writing papers for a custom-essay company and to describe the extent of student cheating he has observed. In the course of editing his article, The Chronicle reviewed correspondence Dante had with clients and some of the papers he had been paid to write. In the article published here, some details of the assignment he describes have been altered to protect the identity of the student.

The request came in by e-mail around 2 in the afternoon. It was from a previous customer, and she had urgent business. I quote her message here verbatim (if I had to put up with it, so should you): "You did me business ethics propsal for me I need propsal got approved pls can you will write me paper?"

I've gotten pretty good at interpreting this kind of correspondence. The client had attached a document from her professor with details about the paper. She needed the first section in a week. Seventy-five pages.

I told her no problem.

It truly was no problem. In the past year, I've written roughly 5,000 pages of scholarly literature, most on very tight deadlines. But you won't find my name on a single paper.
Related Content

* Live Chat With an Academic Ghostwriter
* Cheating Goes Global as Essay Mills Multiply

Enlarge Image 5713-Dante 2

Jonathan Barkat for The Chronicle Review
close 5713-Dante 2

Jonathan Barkat for The Chronicle Review

I've written toward a master's degree in cognitive psychology, a Ph.D. in sociology, and a handful of postgraduate credits in international diplomacy. I've worked on bachelor's degrees in hospitality, business administration, and accounting. I've written for courses in history, cinema, labor relations, pharmacology, theology, sports management, maritime security, airline services, sustainability, municipal budgeting, marketing, philosophy, ethics, Eastern religion, postmodern architecture, anthropology, literature, and public administration. I've attended three dozen online universities. I've completed 12 graduate theses of 50 pages or more. All for someone else.

You've never heard of me, but there's a good chance that you've read some of my work. I'm a hired gun, a doctor of everything, an academic mercenary. My customers are your students. I promise you that. Somebody in your classroom uses a service that you can't detect, that you can't defend against, that you may not even know exists.

I work at an online company that generates tens of thousands of dollars a month by creating original essays based on specific instructions provided by cheating students. I've worked there full time since 2004. On any day of the academic year, I am working on upward of 20 assignments.

In the midst of this great recession, business is booming. At busy times, during midterms and finals, my company's staff of roughly 50 writers is not large enough to satisfy the demands of students who will pay for our work and claim it as their own.

You would be amazed by the incompetence of your students' writing. I have seen the word "desperate" misspelled every way you can imagine. And these students truly are desperate. They couldn't write a convincing grocery list, yet they are in graduate school. They really need help. They need help learning and, separately, they need help passing their courses. But they aren't getting it.

For those of you who have ever mentored a student through the writing of a dissertation, served on a thesis-review committee, or guided a graduate student through a formal research process, I have a question: Do you ever wonder how a student who struggles to formulate complete sentences in conversation manages to produce marginally competent research? How does that student get by you?

I live well on the desperation, misery, and incompetence that your educational system has created. Granted, as a writer, I could earn more; certainly there are ways to earn less. But I never struggle to find work. And as my peers trudge through thankless office jobs that seem more intolerable with every passing month of our sustained recession, I am on pace for my best year yet. I will make roughly $66,000 this year. Not a king's ransom, but higher than what many actual educators are paid.

Of course, I know you are aware that cheating occurs. But you have no idea how deeply this kind of cheating penetrates the academic system, much less how to stop it. Last summer The New York Times reported that 61 percent of undergraduates have admitted to some form of cheating on assignments and exams. Yet there is little discussion about custom papers and how they differ from more-detectable forms of plagiarism, or about why students cheat in the first place.

It is my hope that this essay will initiate such a conversation. As for me, I'm planning to retire. I'm tired of helping you make your students look competent.

It is late in the semester when the business student contacts me, a time when I typically juggle deadlines and push out 20 to 40 pages a day. I had written a short research proposal for her a few weeks before, suggesting a project that connected a surge of unethical business practices to the patterns of trade liberalization. The proposal was approved, and now I had six days to complete the assignment. This was not quite a rush order, which we get top dollar to write. This assignment would be priced at a standard $2,000, half of which goes in my pocket.

A few hours after I had agreed to write the paper, I received the following e-mail: "sending sorces for ur to use thanx."

I did not reply immediately. One hour later, I received another message:

"did u get the sorce I send

please where you are now?

Desprit to pass spring projict"

Not only was this student going to be a constant thorn in my side, but she also communicated in haiku, each less decipherable than the one before it. I let her know that I was giving her work the utmost attention, that I had received her sources, and that I would be in touch if I had any questions. Then I put it aside.

From my experience, three demographic groups seek out my services: the English-as-second-language student; the hopelessly deficient student; and the lazy rich kid.

For the last, colleges are a perfect launching ground—they are built to reward the rich and to forgive them their laziness. Let's be honest: The successful among us are not always the best and the brightest, and certainly not the most ethical. My favorite customers are those with an unlimited supply of money and no shortage of instructions on how they would like to see their work executed. While the deficient student will generally not know how to ask for what he wants until he doesn't get it, the lazy rich student will know exactly what he wants. He is poised for a life of paying others and telling them what to do. Indeed, he is acquiring all the skills he needs to stay on top.

As for the first two types of students—the ESL and the hopelessly deficient—colleges are utterly failing them. Students who come to American universities from other countries find that their efforts to learn a new language are confounded not only by cultural difficulties but also by the pressures of grading. The focus on evaluation rather than education means that those who haven't mastered English must do so quickly or suffer the consequences. My service provides a particularly quick way to "master" English. And those who are hopelessly deficient—a euphemism, I admit—struggle with communication in general.

Two days had passed since I last heard from the business student. Overnight I had received 14 e-mails from her. She had additional instructions for the assignment, such as "but more again please make sure they are a good link betwee the leticture review and all the chapter and the benfet of my paper. finally do you think the level of this work? how match i can get it?"

I'll admit, I didn't fully understand that one.

It was followed by some clarification: "where u are can you get my messages? Please I pay a lot and dont have ao to faile I strated to get very worry."

Her messages had arrived between 2 a.m. and 6 a.m. Again I assured her I had the matter under control.

It was true. At this point, there are few academic challenges that I find intimidating. You name it, I've been paid to write about it.

Customers' orders are endlessly different yet strangely all the same. No matter what the subject, clients want to be assured that their assignment is in capable hands. It would be terrible to think that your Ivy League graduate thesis was riding on the work ethic and perspicacity of a public-university slacker. So part of my job is to be whatever my clients want me to be. I say yes when I am asked if I have a Ph.D. in sociology. I say yes when I am asked if I have professional training in industrial/organizational psychology. I say yes when asked if I have ever designed a perpetual-motion-powered time machine and documented my efforts in a peer-reviewed journal.

The subject matter, the grade level, the college, the course—these things are irrelevant to me. Prices are determined per page and are based on how long I have to complete the assignment. As long as it doesn't require me to do any math or video-documented animal husbandry, I will write anything.

I have completed countless online courses. Students provide me with passwords and user names so I can access key documents and online exams. In some instances, I have even contributed to weekly online discussions with other students in the class.

I have become a master of the admissions essay. I have written these for undergraduate, master's, and doctoral programs, some at elite universities. I can explain exactly why you're Brown material, why the Wharton M.B.A. program would benefit from your presence, how certain life experiences have prepared you for the rigors of your chosen course of study. I do not mean to be insensitive, but I can't tell you how many times I've been paid to write about somebody helping a loved one battle cancer. I've written essays that could be adapted into Meryl Streep movies.

I do a lot of work for seminary students. I like seminary students. They seem so blissfully unaware of the inherent contradiction in paying somebody to help them cheat in courses that are largely about walking in the light of God and providing an ethical model for others to follow. I have been commissioned to write many a passionate condemnation of America's moral decay as exemplified by abortion, gay marriage, or the teaching of evolution. All in all, we may presume that clerical authorities see these as a greater threat than the plagiarism committed by the future frocked.

With respect to America's nurses, fear not. Our lives are in capable hands­—just hands that can't write a lick. Nursing students account for one of my company's biggest customer bases. I've written case-management plans, reports on nursing ethics, and essays on why nurse practitioners are lighting the way to the future of medicine. I've even written pharmaceutical-treatment courses, for patients who I hope were hypothetical.

I, who have no name, no opinions, and no style, have written so many papers at this point, including legal briefs, military-strategy assessments, poems, lab reports, and, yes, even papers on academic integrity, that it's hard to determine which course of study is most infested with cheating. But I'd say education is the worst. I've written papers for students in elementary-education programs, special-education majors, and ESL-training courses. I've written lesson plans for aspiring high-school teachers, and I've synthesized reports from notes that customers have taken during classroom observations. I've written essays for those studying to become school administrators, and I've completed theses for those on course to become principals. In the enormous conspiracy that is student cheating, the frontline intelligence community is infiltrated by double agents. (Future educators of America, I know who you are.)

As the deadline for the business-ethics paper approaches, I think about what's ahead of me. Whenever I take on an assignment this large, I get a certain physical sensation. My body says: Are you sure you want to do this again? You know how much it hurt the last time. You know this student will be with you for a long time. You know you will become her emergency contact, her guidance counselor and life raft. You know that for the 48 hours that you dedicate to writing this paper, you will cease all human functions but typing, you will Google until the term has lost all meaning, and you will drink enough coffee to fuel a revolution in a small Central American country.

But then there's the money, the sense that I must capitalize on opportunity, and even a bit of a thrill in seeing whether I can do it.

And I can. It's not implausible to write a 75-page paper in two days. It's just miserable. I don't need much sleep, and when I get cranking, I can churn out four or five pages an hour. First I lay out the sections of an assignment—introduction, problem statement, methodology, literature review, findings, conclusion—whatever the instructions call for. Then I start Googling.

I haven't been to a library once since I started doing this job. Amazon is quite generous about free samples. If I can find a single page from a particular text, I can cobble that into a report, deducing what I don't know from customer reviews and publisher blurbs. Google Scholar is a great source for material, providing the abstract of nearly any journal article. And of course, there's Wikipedia, which is often my first stop when dealing with unfamiliar subjects. Naturally one must verify such material elsewhere, but I've taken hundreds of crash courses this way.

After I've gathered my sources, I pull out usable quotes, cite them, and distribute them among the sections of the assignment. Over the years, I've refined ways of stretching papers. I can write a four-word sentence in 40 words. Just give me one phrase of quotable text, and I'll produce two pages of ponderous explanation. I can say in 10 pages what most normal people could say in a paragraph.

I've also got a mental library of stock academic phrases: "A close consideration of the events which occurred in ____ during the ____ demonstrate that ____ had entered into a phase of widespread cultural, social, and economic change that would define ____ for decades to come." Fill in the blanks using words provided by the professor in the assignment's instructions.

How good is the product created by this process? That depends—on the day, my mood, how many other assignments I am working on. It also depends on the customer, his or her expectations, and the degree to which the completed work exceeds his or her abilities. I don't ever edit my assignments. That way I get fewer customer requests to "dumb it down." So some of my work is great. Some of it is not so great. Most of my clients do not have the wherewithal to tell the difference, which probably means that in most cases the work is better than what the student would have produced on his or her own. I've actually had customers thank me for being clever enough to insert typos. "Nice touch," they'll say.

I've read enough academic material to know that I'm not the only bullshit artist out there. I think about how Dickens got paid per word and how, as a result, Bleak House is ... well, let's be diplomatic and say exhaustive. Dickens is a role model for me.

So how does someone become a custom-paper writer? The story of how I got into this job may be instructive. It is mostly about the tremendous disappointment that awaited me in college.

My distaste for the early hours and regimented nature of high school was tempered by the promise of the educational community ahead, with its free exchange of ideas and access to great minds. How dispiriting to find out that college was just another place where grades were grubbed, competition overshadowed personal growth, and the threat of failure was used to encourage learning.

Although my university experience did not live up to its vaunted reputation, it did lead me to where I am today. I was raised in an upper-middle-class family, but I went to college in a poor neighborhood. I fit in really well: After paying my tuition, I didn't have a cent to my name. I had nothing but a meal plan and my roommate's computer. But I was determined to write for a living, and, moreover, to spend these extremely expensive years learning how to do so. When I completed my first novel, in the summer between sophomore and junior years, I contacted the English department about creating an independent study around editing and publishing it. I was received like a mental patient. I was told, "There's nothing like that here." I was told that I could go back to my classes, sit in my lectures, and fill out Scantron tests until I graduated.

I didn't much care for my classes, though. I slept late and spent the afternoons working on my own material. Then a funny thing happened. Here I was, begging anybody in authority to take my work seriously. But my classmates did. They saw my abilities and my abundance of free time. They saw a value that the university did not.

It turned out that my lazy, Xanax-snorting, Miller-swilling classmates were thrilled to pay me to write their papers. And I was thrilled to take their money. Imagine you are crumbling under the weight of university-issued parking tickets and self-doubt when a frat boy offers you cash to write about Plato. Doing that job was a no-brainer. Word of my services spread quickly, especially through the fraternities. Soon I was receiving calls from strangers who wanted to commission my work. I was a writer!

Nearly a decade later, students, not publishers, still come from everywhere to find me.

I work hard for a living. I'm nice to people. But I understand that in simple terms, I'm the bad guy. I see where I'm vulnerable to ethical scrutiny.

But pointing the finger at me is too easy. Why does my business thrive? Why do so many students prefer to cheat rather than do their own work?

Say what you want about me, but I am not the reason your students cheat.

You know what's never happened? I've never had a client complain that he'd been expelled from school, that the originality of his work had been questioned, that some disciplinary action had been taken. As far as I know, not one of my customers has ever been caught.

With just two days to go, I was finally ready to throw myself into the business assignment. I turned off my phone, caged myself in my office, and went through the purgatory of cramming the summation of a student's alleged education into a weekend. Try it sometime. After the 20th hour on a single subject, you have an almost-out-of-body experience.

My client was thrilled with my work. She told me that she would present the chapter to her mentor and get back to me with our next steps. Two weeks passed, by which time the assignment was but a distant memory, obscured by the several hundred pages I had written since. On a Wednesday evening, I received the following e-mail:

"Thanx u so much for the chapter is going very good the porfesser likes it but wants the folloing suggestions please what do you thing?:

"'The hypothesis is interesting but I'd like to see it a bit more focused. Choose a specific connection and try to prove it.'

"What shoudwe say?"

This happens a lot. I get paid per assignment. But with longer papers, the student starts to think of me as a personal educational counselor. She paid me to write a one-page response to her professor, and then she paid me to revise her paper. I completed each of these assignments, sustaining the voice that the student had established and maintaining the front of competence from some invisible location far beneath the ivory tower.

The 75-page paper on business ethics ultimately expanded into a 160-page graduate thesis, every word of which was written by me. I can't remember the name of my client, but it's her name on my work. We collaborated for months. As with so many other topics I tackle, the connection between unethical business practices and trade liberalization became a subtext to my everyday life.

So, of course, you can imagine my excitement when I received the good news:

"thanx so much for uhelp ican going to graduate to now".
Photographer@shindags || twitch.tv/shindigs
CanucksJC
Profile Blog Joined August 2010
Canada1241 Posts
November 17 2010 19:27 GMT
#2
Im not surprised that something like this is happening...
I'd gladly pay someone a reasonable amount to have my exams written and im not even that rich.
universities are just too competitive and exhausting these days...
UBC StarCraft Club is official @ UBC Vancouver campus! Your first eSport community on campus. Welcomes players of all levels at UBC. Follow us on facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/home.php#!/group.php?gid=155630424470014 or IRC @ irc.rizon.net #ubcsc
emythrel
Profile Blog Joined August 2010
United Kingdom2599 Posts
November 17 2010 19:28 GMT
#3
[B]On November 18 2010 04:23 shindigs wrote: The interesting part to me is that this extends even to the levels of PhD thesises (thesi?)


I believe the plural is the same as the singular, i can't remember off the top of my head.

This stuff has been happening for years and years, friends doing homework for each other, scholars being paid to "correct" papers (they usually just re-write it for you) and directly stealing old papers.

Unfortunately, most adjudicators (the people who mark papers) don't have an opportunity to read other materials from the student and thus have no way to check whether the paper was written by the student or ghost written. It is the responsibility of the teacher to read over the papers and check they were written by the student, and when you have 50 students papers to read... thats hard to do.
When there is nothing left to lose but your dignity, it is already gone.
Nagano
Profile Blog Joined July 2010
United States1157 Posts
November 17 2010 19:29 GMT
#4
Hmm, I need to utilize these services so I can play SC even more.
“The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn.”
emythrel
Profile Blog Joined August 2010
United Kingdom2599 Posts
November 17 2010 19:31 GMT
#5
On November 18 2010 04:27 CanucksJC wrote:
Im not surprised that something like this is happening...
I'd gladly pay someone a reasonable amount to have my exams written and im not even that rich.
universities are just too competitive and exhausting these days...


so you'd rather not earn your degree? thats more of a reflection on you than your uni.

You go to further education to learn and get a better job. If a lawyer had someone else write all their papers, how would they ever be able to do their job? Sorry, but your statement makes me think very badly of you, I have never cheated in my life and have never considered it an option. Not because "its wrong" but because I want to EARN my accolades so that i can feel proud of them.
When there is nothing left to lose but your dignity, it is already gone.
Nagano
Profile Blog Joined July 2010
United States1157 Posts
November 17 2010 19:35 GMT
#6
On November 18 2010 04:28 emythrel wrote:
Show nested quote +
[B]On November 18 2010 04:23 shindigs wrote: The interesting part to me is that this extends even to the levels of PhD thesises (thesi?)


I believe the plural is the same as the singular, i can't remember off the top of my head.


thesis
theses
“The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn.”
Jayme
Profile Blog Joined February 2009
United States5866 Posts
November 17 2010 19:37 GMT
#7
This guy is nothing short of brilliant to say the least. I'd its one thing I've noticed it's how awful people write in university. Yea it's cheating and yea he perpetuates it but our education system has been fail for years.
Python is garbage, number 1 advocate of getting rid of it.
JinNJuice
Profile Joined June 2010
United States255 Posts
November 17 2010 19:39 GMT
#8
Honestly I'm not surprised in the slightest. Looking at the students even in my school who are supposed to be top engineering students, I'm amazed at how poor their writing skills are. I don't even want to imagine the graduating high school seniors. The use of texting since they were in 6th grade does not help them improve any technical or creating writing skills at all. It's only going to get worse.
KevinIX
Profile Joined October 2009
United States2472 Posts
November 17 2010 19:43 GMT
#9
It's like paying Cella to powerlevel your account to Diamond.
Liquid FIGHTING!!!
Trowabarton756
Profile Blog Joined May 2008
United States870 Posts
November 17 2010 19:43 GMT
#10
On November 18 2010 04:31 emythrel wrote:
Show nested quote +
On November 18 2010 04:27 CanucksJC wrote:
Im not surprised that something like this is happening...
I'd gladly pay someone a reasonable amount to have my exams written and im not even that rich.
universities are just too competitive and exhausting these days...


so you'd rather not earn your degree? thats more of a reflection on you than your uni.

You go to further education to learn and get a better job. If a lawyer had someone else write all their papers, how would they ever be able to do their job? Sorry, but your statement makes me think very badly of you, I have never cheated in my life and have never considered it an option. Not because "its wrong" but because I want to EARN my accolades so that i can feel proud of them.


well thats a tool statement. Just because I don't want to waste my time writing papers for a class I already know stuff about(im looking at you fucking english) doesn't mean I don't know it, I just don't want to waste my time.

And before you say anything about me not earning anything, I was like the guy in the OP during High School, getting paid to let people cheat off me.
http://www.teamliquid.net/video/streams/Trowabarton756
Gecko
Profile Joined August 2010
United States519 Posts
November 17 2010 19:44 GMT
#11
This really is not surprising, the focus on getting good test and project scores instead of learning the material and growing as an intellectual has plagued my education since middle school. I grew up in Florida where half of my classroom time was at times devoted to learning how to pass state mandated assessment tests instead of learning things that were actually useful to me in the real world. Unfortunately people who struggle in school would turn to something like this because the educational system has failed them in a way. Or they are just lazy rich kids who can pay their way to a degree with no real consequences.
snotboogie
Profile Blog Joined August 2009
Australia3550 Posts
November 17 2010 19:45 GMT
#12
Thanks for posting. His life and business are riveting stuff and I can certainly relate to the insanity of cramming out pages and pages of almost-due assignment.

The obvious next step for this guy is to write a book about the subject; I'd buy it for sure.
Steel
Profile Blog Joined April 2010
Japan2283 Posts
November 17 2010 19:45 GMT
#13
Very interesting, and I would understand why people do this for english classes... some people are just terrible at english. The worst part is, (I believe) it's because of the parents: if a child reads books of increasing difficulty he'll do fine in english or any other language for that matter. Books are amazing but schools teach (mostly) terrible books with garbage morals. My sister made me read the Hobbit when I was young and I got hooked on fantasy books. I don't read that much, just to kill time in the bus/metro on the way to school or between classes, and it's enough make me better than average in english, and my first language is french.

And then people who hire him to do program-specific essays...blow my mind. What are you doing in that course if you don't find it interesting? Your future life is going to suck if you go in a profession you hate with no actual knowledge about it.
Try another route paperboy.
StarBrift
Profile Joined January 2008
Sweden1761 Posts
November 17 2010 19:52 GMT
#14
On November 18 2010 04:43 Trowabarton756 wrote:
Show nested quote +
On November 18 2010 04:31 emythrel wrote:
On November 18 2010 04:27 CanucksJC wrote:
Im not surprised that something like this is happening...
I'd gladly pay someone a reasonable amount to have my exams written and im not even that rich.
universities are just too competitive and exhausting these days...


so you'd rather not earn your degree? thats more of a reflection on you than your uni.

You go to further education to learn and get a better job. If a lawyer had someone else write all their papers, how would they ever be able to do their job? Sorry, but your statement makes me think very badly of you, I have never cheated in my life and have never considered it an option. Not because "its wrong" but because I want to EARN my accolades so that i can feel proud of them.


well thats a tool statement. Just because I don't want to waste my time writing papers for a class I already know stuff about(im looking at you fucking english) doesn't mean I don't know it, I just don't want to waste my time.

And before you say anything about me not earning anything, I was like the guy in the OP during High School, getting paid to let people cheat off me.


Sorry to break it to you but studying well in highschool does not give you a moral right to let other people do your work for you in college.

It's cheating. Period.
Frits
Profile Joined March 2003
11782 Posts
November 17 2010 19:53 GMT
#15
I find it hard to believe that this dude can write a quality report on nearly anything. Sure it's simple enough to write 5 pages an hour but that doesn't mean it will be any good. Each field has it's own set of rules you need to abide by and there are complex concepts that need to be understood and researched before you can start writing a decent paper about them. There's no way any of these papers are getting decent grades on any hard major at a credible university.

I don't know a single person who does this.
Kipsate
Profile Blog Joined July 2010
Netherlands45349 Posts
November 17 2010 19:55 GMT
#16
While this is not news it is shocking how that guy is seriously has a FULLTIME job working as a gun for hire, it is also very interesting to see it fromh is point of view. Judging by how he wrote this article he could be an incredibly good writer.
WriterXiao8~~
Sufficiency
Profile Blog Joined October 2010
Canada23833 Posts
November 17 2010 19:55 GMT
#17
This is not real news. But I seriously doubt any person who does this for a living can produce work with the kind of quality I satisfy with. However, if a student is close to failing, perhaps hiring someone can get a boost.

Of course it's cheating...
https://twitter.com/SufficientStats
orgolove
Profile Blog Joined April 2009
Vatican City State1650 Posts
November 17 2010 19:59 GMT
#18
eh, I bet I can do this shit too, but 66k a year isn't much. -_-
초대 갓, 이영호 | First God, Lee Young Ho
Amber[LighT]
Profile Blog Joined June 2005
United States5078 Posts
November 17 2010 20:01 GMT
#19
On November 18 2010 04:59 orgolove wrote:
eh, I bet I can do this shit too, but 66k a year isn't much. -_-

It's enough to live off of for doing little work.

I can't believe people are so lazy that they can't even write their own essays.
"We have unfinished business, I and he."
Deadlyfish
Profile Joined August 2010
Denmark1980 Posts
Last Edited: 2010-11-17 20:01:31
November 17 2010 20:01 GMT
#20
I think this is a good thing, school has always been about just writting mindless essays instead of actually learning. You are just forced to spend time doing something you already know how to do, with no real reward. I hate having to practice what i'm already perfect at. Like doing some sort of math 20 times when i already know how to do it. It's just a waste of my time.

I wouldnt care if anyone did this, since it doesnt really affect me.
If wishes were horses we'd be eating steak right now.
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