Simon Bullock, speaking for the Quality Assurance Agency, plays a wonderfully straight bat when he declares that the QAA will not tolerate students resorting to essay mills (鈥Using an essay mill is cheating 鈥 no ifs, no buts鈥, Letters, 8 June). It鈥檚 just not cricket. 鈥淣o ifs, no buts鈥, he declares in the phraseology made notorious by David Cameron鈥檚 irresolute refusal to contemplate another runway at Heathrow.
Plagiarism, the form of cheating used by essay mill customers, is rife. Senior managers in organisations of all sorts present as their own what was written by their juniors. So do university managers, and academics, spurred on by the demands of a regime that measures quality by counting publications. The plagiarism policies with which universities decorate their websites are often themselves plagiarised. Even the QAA鈥檚 report on essay mills, , itself borrows (in small part) from other sources.
One might not approve of them 鈥 and I do not (see 鈥It鈥檚 not essay mills that are doing the grinding鈥, Opinions, 25 May, and ) 鈥 but essay mills are part of the real world of higher education. In this nasty reality, they seem almost more honest than a finger-wagging, self-righteous QAA. Bullock prudishly objects to my description of essay mills as 鈥渆nterprising鈥. One has only to google 鈥淪imon Bullock QAA鈥 to be put straight through to the websites of several essay mills.
Stuart Macdonald
Visiting professor
School of Management
University of Leicester
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