Understanding Plagiarism and Contract Cheating
At MIT we want YOU to succeed as YOU.
This means we want to see YOUR ideas and hear YOUR voice in your assessments, not someone else’s.?We start with the academic values of honesty, trust, fairness, respect, responsibility, and courage. These are the basis of integrity in learning and assessment.
We want you to be honest and have courage in putting forward your own ideas. This builds trust and creates fairness for everyone in their learning – everyone has an equal chance; no one has an unfair advantage.
Using someone else’s ideas or words without proper referencing goes against the values of academic integrity.
More seriously, using someone else’s ideas or words is considered academic misconduct, often referred to as plagiarism. It’s very important that you know what plagiarism is, and what the special form of plagiarism known as “contract cheating” is, and how to avoid these.
Plagiarism
What is plagiarism?
Plagiarism is using?other?people’s research,?work,?ideas, or?expressions without giving credit to them, or acknowledging?them as the source through proper referencing.
Contract Cheating
What is Contract Cheating?
Contract cheating (sometimes called ‘ghost-writing’) is a type of plagiarism when a student gets someone else to write an assessment or assignment which they then submit as their own work. This includes using Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI) services like ChatGPT.
It can involve paying a fee to a third party, but it doesn’t have to. Specifically, it doesn’t matter if:
- You are approached by someone offering to do the work, or you approach someone to ask them;
- You pay for the work done
- You use a GenAI service (i.e., ChatGPT) to create your assessment for you, or
- The work is done by a friend, family member,?or a professional contract cheating company.
In all cases, if a third party – including a family member – has done the work for you, it is a very serious breach of our academic integrity expectations. We consider it as cheating. Most important of all, by using someone else’s ideas or work and passing it off as your own, you are also cheating yourself of learning.
If you use a cheating service, you are placing yourself at serious reputational risk, and are also undermining integrity values like fairness and trust and cheating your own learning.
Instead, be guided by us on how to do the right thing – talk to your lecturer about what is expected (such as referencing), seek their feedback before you submit your work, write your own ideas, and go for the honest result.