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Cheating in College Application Essays

Thanks to the Internet, smart phones, and other technological advances, the frequency of cheating in college鈥攗nfortunately鈥攃ontinues to soar. Some high school seniors are following suit before they even begin their first semester by plagiarizing their college application essays.

It鈥檚 merely one portion of the entire college application, but writing an application essay is no easy task. According to the a majority of colleges and universities still consider college application essays to be of 鈥渃onsiderable鈥 or 鈥渕oderate鈥 importance in determining which academically qualified students gain admittance.

Buying Essays Online

High school seniors have fretted over college essays for decades, and the stress or lack of motivation for some students makes them desperate enough to buy essays online or use one that a friend or parent wrote for them.

A 2007 study conducted by plagiarism software developer iParadigms analyzed the personal statements of 453,000 college applications. Forty-four percent contained some matching text while 36 percent contained 鈥渟ignificant matching text,鈥 leading to the suspicion that they were plagiarized, 鈥渞ecycled,鈥 or purchased documents, reported

Software Compares College Essays to Other Content

iParadigms鈥 plagiarism product, (pronounced 鈥淭urn it in鈥) was such a success that they created in December 2009. Personal statements, admissions and scholarship essays, and other content submitted by college applicants are verified to help discover cheating in college application essays. Documents are submitted to a huge database of Internet content, subscription content, and other previously submitted documents. If a student鈥檚 content matches other content so closely that cheating is suspected, the college can then determine what action, if any, to take.

The reports that more than one hundred U.S. colleges and universities are now using Turnitin for Admissions, mainly for graduate applicants. The article speaks of plagiarized college applications at schools from coast to coast.

One MBA applicant at Boston University wrote about his own employment history, lavishly describing the organizations for which he had worked. A UCLA Anderson School of Management applicant used the same exact terms to describe his father. Coincidence? No. The Boston University student鈥檚 essay was from 2003 and had been posted on a business website. The UCLA applicant was rejected for plagiarism, thanks to Turnitin for Admissions.

Why Applicants Cheat

Larry Schwartz, graduate admissions director at Dominican University of California in San Rafael, told the Times that some applicants 鈥渞esort to whatever means possible to get an edge. It’s unfortunate, but I think it’s human nature.鈥

together with the Chronicle of Higher Education, surveyed over 1,000 college presidents from both public and private two-year and four-year schools. More than half said they have noticed an increase in plagiarism in the last decade and claimed that the Internet has played a major role.

Don McCabe, a professor at Rutgers University Business School, told that many students cheat simply because others do. 鈥淭hey see other students cheating and getting away with it and getting ahead in this great GPA race,鈥 which makes them feel like they’re being left behind unfairly, McCabe explained.

The American Dream?

Cheating in college application essays isn鈥檛 limited to American students. reports that some Asian students are willing to sacrifice their integrity and do whatever it takes to attend a U.S. college or university. College prep agencies offer plagiarized essays in perfect English as well as fake awards, transcripts with adjusted grades, and even smarter students willing to pose as the applicant to take SAT exams.

A survey by Zinch China suggests that application fraud among Chinese college applicants is ubiquitous. According to the 250-student survey, an astonishing 70 percent of college essays were ghostwritten and 50 percent of high school transcripts were also faked.

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Melissa Rhone earned her Bachelor of Music in Education from the University of Tampa. She resides in the Tampa Bay area and enjoys writing about college, pop culture, and epilepsy awareness.