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A fine red line: when does editing a student’s work become cheating?

At least one university has explicitly restricted students’ use of editors for their assignments.

BY JESSICA NATALE WOOLLARD | AUG 25 2017

Over the last several years, staff members at the Centre for Academic Communication at the University of Victoria reported to administrators some curious conversations taking place around editing. The centre offers free services to students to assist them with reading comprehension and writing, but staff members are instructed not to correct students’ work, only pose questions. Students, however, had different expectations and complained when centre staff wouldn’t “fix up” their papers.

Professors, too, misunderstood the role of the centre; some sent students there because they wanted staff to improve their students’ work. What’s more, the centre received calls from parents asking how much editing they could do on their children’s papers without it being considered cheating.

At the time of these conversations, UVic’s policy on academic integrity didn’t explicitly mention editing. Sara Beam, an associate professor in the faculty of history at UVic and chair of the senate committee on academic standards, said the confusion around editing another person’s work signalled it was time to clear up the matter: “No matter who [a student works with] – friend, parent, editor – they point out problems but they don’t solve them for you,” Dr. Beam said.

In May, UVic revised its policy on academic integrity to explicitly restrict students’ use of editors. The policy defines an editor as “an individual or service … who manipulates, revises, corrects or alters a student’s written or non-written work.” The use of such a person or service, whether paid or unpaid, “is prohibited.” The only exemption is if the instructor grants permission in writing, specifying “the extent of editing that is being authorized.”

Dr. Beam said she doesn’t think the new policy makes UVic a trailblazer. “We did quite a broad consultation, and [the university policies we looked at] were trying to grapple with the same problem, but they were all doing it slightly differently.”

Nevertheless, a quick online review of official policies, student handbooks or course calendars for 31 Canadian universities found only five that specifically mentioned editing. Among them was Ryerson University; its senate policy on academic integrity (PDF) states that it is considered plagiarism if a student claims another person’s “edits or changes to an assignment” as their own. The University of Alberta’s policy states that it is an offence if a student passes off “substantial editorial assistance” as their own work.

A growing need for clarity

Dr. Beam said the decision to revise UVic’s policy came from a desire for clarity. “Most of the time, students want to follow the rules. … We wanted to make it explicit so students making other choices are aware of what they’re doing and aware of the consequences should they be caught.”

In writing the policy, UVic consulted extensively across faculties and with the university ombudsman, and also looked to Editors Canada’s Guidelines for Ethical Editing of Theses/Dissertations, which were first published in 2005. At the time, editors being approached to work on dissertations felt “uncomfortable about whether or to what extent it was reasonable to provide those editing services,” said Elizabeth d’Anjou, a freelance editor based in Prince Edward County, Ontario, and Editors Canada’s outgoing director of professional standards. Some felt no editing should take place, she said, while others “thought that there was a place for ethical editing – and, in many cases, students’ advisers had told them to get an editor.”

When the guidelines were produced, Ms. d’Anjou said the “assumption was that editors would only be working with graduate students,” though she noted her peers are reporting an increase in undergraduate students seeking editing help. The guidelines are currently being revised.

Lenore Hietkamp, a member of Editors Canada and a freelance editor based in Shawnigan Lake, B.C., said that, over the last decade, the number of students seeking editing services has increased. And with the increased demand has come an increase in expectations of how much an editor will do. Ms. Hietkamp said some of her clients were frustrated that she wouldn’t correct their work, only ask questions and alert them to problems.

Following Editors Canada’s guidelines, Ms. Hietkamp said she began asking potential clients for a note from their professors sanctioning their working with an editor. Often, she never heard back from them. Eventually, Ms. Hietkamp stopped editing undergraduate papers, then cut out work for master’s students, too.

“There’s a spectrum of editors and what they’ll do,” she said, noting that she often backtracks and removes some of her edits, erring on the side of caution rather than overstepping an ethical line and interfering with student learning. “I think universities need to have a policy [around editing]. Students need some guidelines. It is the Wild West.”

The ethical dilemma facing editors like Ms. Hietkamp and the staff at UVic begs the question: are the writing and communication skills of Canadian students making the grade? Editor Claudia Haagen of Victoria doesn’t think so. “I’ve come to feel strongly – and my academic colleagues agree – that admission standards have changed, that literacy levels are not what they used to be,” she said.

Roy Jensen, a chemistry professor at the University of Alberta, said universities need to improve how they teach writing and communications, regardless of the faculty. “Communications is a skill that every specialty needs,” said Dr. Jensen, who wrote Communicating Science (PDF), a book aimed at helping science students convey scientific information more clearly and effectively. Part of the trouble, he said, is that in faculties where writing isn’t the pedagogical goal of the class, the professors are not “comfortable grading and assessing other people’s English.”

A fine line

All writers, good and bad, new and seasoned, benefit from editing. But should students, whose primary role is to learn and demonstrate learning, be able to use the services of an editor? Is it acceptable for a doctoral thesis to be edited? How about an undergraduate essay or lab assignment?

UVic’s new policy does allow for exceptions, Dr. Beam said. “We wanted … language that was broad enough to incorporate all those kinds of assignments that students are evaluated on, and yet flexible enough to acknowledge the diversity of pedagogical goals across campus.”

Faculty received guidelines on how to implement the policy, she said, including information on when it’s permissible to exempt assignments or condone editing in certain scenarios. “No computer science professor wants their students’ code being edited, but they might be okay with the introductory paragraph being edited, because that’s not their main pedagogical goal,” Dr. Beam said by way of example.

Ms. Haagen said she believes responsible editing should never be considered plagiarism, that there’s learning to be done even when an editor has looked over a student’s work. “We all use track changes, which requires the student to work through each and every highlight and accept or reject the recommendation. The editorial decision is in the hands of the student,” she said.

Todd Pettigrew, an associate professor of English at Cape Breton University who writes a blog on higher education issues, agreed that professional feedback of the kind Ms. Haagen describes is not the problem. But, he said an ethical line should be drawn when someone changes a work to such a degree that it can no longer legitimately be called the student’s own.

“I suspect the fear is that the original student might create a largely ungrammatical piece of prose, and the editor revises it wholesale on a sentence-by-sentence basis,” said Dr. Pettigrew. “If the editor improves the argument or provides new evidence, then she has really become a co-author, perhaps the principal author of the assignment. And that is not much different than simply paying someone to write your paper for you.”

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  1. Roy Jensen / August 25, 2017 at 22:17

    Every survey I have seen that asks prospective employers how the undergraduate program could be improved returns “improve their communication skills” as one of the top two responses. Universities are failing students by not preparing them for the workforce. Skills like editing, peer review, and receiving feedback are valuable in the workforce, and teaching them in the undergraduate program — however scary it is to students — is the safest place to learn them.

    This means rethinking how essays and reports are prepared and graded. With technology, it is possible to integrate an anonymous peer-review system. (It won’t be anonymous in the workplace.)

    Communicating Science (http://www.RoguePublishing.ca/content/Communicating_Science) is a FREE resource that provides student with these skills, and more.

    • Jeremy_Len / September 3, 2017 at 17:58

      Usually I use http://essaytools.com/ . You can upload your essays in different formats and download PDF report. By the way your essay will not be added to essay database and appear on the internet

    • Candace / December 13, 2017 at 17:25

      Mr. Jensen, I agree that editing, peer review, and receiving feedback are useful skills that should be taught in undergraduate programs. But most of the students I have seen over the past 22 years I have spent in academe are in no way ready for these. They lack the basic underlying foundation – the ability to communicate in a literate, grammatically correct fashion themselves! How can you edit your own work or anyone else’s when you cannot write a simple paragraph without committing at least a dozen errors of grammar, spelling, and punctuation? Student writing skills over the years truly have declined.

      I have read undergraduate English composition papers for many years, and they have gone from mostly clear, with a thesis statement one could understand, arguments backed iwth evidence, and a reasonable conclusion to near-gibberish. Students do not understand the need to back their statements with evidence, or that someone else may have a different view and simply deciding the other person is an idiot and getting angry is not a reasonable argument. They write as if they are on social media, not as if they need to convince someone of their point.

      Yes, I realize I sound like an old grouch – but I am not alone, and many people believe writing is getting worse. Both my spouse and I were in English PhD programs, and taught English composition and graded literally thousands of papers. He completed the program; I switched into another field entirely, but still do some adjunct work periodically. However, both of us ceased doing any sort of teaching of writing full time. It was simply too exhausting and depressing. I am now in a position where I do a lot of hiring, and I can scarcely believe how many resumes and cover letters I receive that are filled with errors and, again, gibberish. Those applications go straight into the circular file. I don’t need people working for me who cannot communicate – but university is just too late to teach basic writing.

      If you’ve gotten to the age of 18 and can’t write a paragraph properly, then sadly, I doubt you’ll ever be good at writing. Students need to learn this much earlier, in grade school. My mother grew up in Germany, and left school in grade 6 due to WWII. She was never taught English. Yet she was taught German grammar, and she cares deeply about not looking foolish, so she worked hard to learn proper English. The result is that my mother with a grade 6 education in another language writes letters in which the quality of the writing is far superior to the writing in most of the papers I’ve received in the last two decades, and those were generally written by people whose first (and often only) language is English. I am omitting ESL students in this discussion. That’s just sad and frightening.

  2. Dieter K Buse / August 26, 2017 at 07:42

    THis is very good, as expected from an excellent former student of mine. She only misses that many high school teachers mislead students into thinking that they are good writers, then they are shocked to find thatuniversity professors point out that they understand neither grammar nor logic….suddenly they turn to editors to maintain grades.
    As for the ethics ….common sense and basic honesty apply, so if a piece is not yours do not pretend it is. I told students to always acknowledge help especially if more than style involved. An endnote explaining input can cover many situations.

  3. Stuart Chambers, Ph.D. / August 28, 2017 at 13:26

    Professors should do their job by setting office hours that focus specifically on helping to edit part of a student’s paper (i.e., the introduction and first body paragraph). This would provide hands-on learning about the expectations of the professor. Too often, professors download this duty on to the academic writing centre, which can be hit and miss, or the teaching assistant (someone who is only editing another’s work for the first time). If papers are generally weak, that shows that the professor did little during the process to prevent bad papers. Time for professors to be more proactive in preventing poorly written essays.

    • Jonathan G. / August 30, 2017 at 10:11

      Professors can’t possibly be expected to help edit papers of all students.

      • Stuart Chambers, Ph.D. / September 3, 2017 at 12:28

        Hi Jonathan. I edit every paper for every student who comes to my office–every one of them. So yes, it can be done, and yes, it’s part of the job. It’s called being professional.

        • B. / September 5, 2017 at 21:04

          I suppose it depends on your research program and teaching responsibilities, because I certainly could not edit all papers. It isn’t about professionalism, it is about the number of hours available in a week.

          • Stuart Chambers, Ph.D. / September 6, 2017 at 08:13

            Here is a practical way around it. Often, half the students may not show for help, but for those who do, just edit the introduction of an essay and the first body paragraph. That takes 10 minutes per student. Once a student knows how to do the introduction, they can do the conclusion. If they can do one body paragraph with points/quotations, it’s the same format for the rest. But it is the introduction/first body paragraph that are crucial. If they can be mastered, the paper has promise. If you offer 90 minutes twice a week for office hours (3 hours a week), you will see the essays of dozens of students. So yes, the time is there if you edit efficiently. It’s still part of the professional duty of every professor to make this work. Think of the alternative of not being proactive. You end up with frustrated students, and the professor corrects poorly written papers. That has been the status quo for too long. It’s time things changed.

    • CV / September 2, 2017 at 14:52

      How many office hours do you recommend holding for three classes with a total of 200 students, where the majority need extensive help in multiple areas? Currently at 55 hours per week for teaching, grading, committee work and service; this includes 5 hours per week of office hours. It’s never enough …

      • Stuart Chambers, Ph.D. / September 5, 2017 at 17:51

        Hi CV. It depends on what your status is and what your goals are. If you are a pure researcher, most do not make editing a paper a priority. In fact, most researchers loath doing that part of the job. If the professor adopts the master teacher role–and teaches 5-7 courses a year–it’s much easier to extend office hours (and e-mail hours) because the priority is teaching. Perhaps it’s better for educational reasons to hire more master teachers who have a Ph.D. but prefer the teaching role. The Globe and Mail discusses the educational role: https://beta.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/lets-focus-on-education-not-university-rankings/article36166635/

  4. Shahnaaz Alidina / August 30, 2017 at 11:39

    The article raises important questions. If more and more students are resorting to ‘fix’ their written work with the help of editors, doesn’t that tell us something? Are we dealing with more diverse students whose writing skills probably differ from mainstream expectations, or are our literacy levels not as what universities expect? I strongly feel that this problem is growing and as Universities accept more and more diverse students there should be focused guidance on writing expectations. Whether it comes from individual Professors or as a required nongraded course that every student should take, we need to look for ways to address this rather than passing it on to academic centers to help out students. For some students ‘scholarly writing’ may be alien and need to be guided appropriately.

    • Samuel Schwartz / August 30, 2017 at 20:47

      If you can’t write properly, maybe you aren’t ready for university. International students shouldn’t get a free pass or create an added burden on profs. If you come here for education, you should be expected to meet minimum language requirements.

  5. Trevor McMonagle / August 30, 2017 at 14:01

    I cannot understand why the editing process is not seen as vital to the academic writing process. Top-level writers routinely acknowledge their editors with comments such as “I couldn’t have done this without …” and “the wise direction of …” In fact, one of the great weaknesses in the current publishing world is the scarcity of in-house editors.

    Perhaps if more emphasis were put on teaching writing – in a real-world, living manner – at the university level, there would be fewer academic papers that are technically correct but dry-as-dust and soul-deadening.

    • Stuart Chambers, Ph.D. / September 3, 2017 at 12:31

      And Trevor, I would add that students would be less frustrated and have a better university experience. It’s time for professors to do their part in editing papers. Be proactive to prevent poor grades.

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