Through this class, I am becoming more convinced that online
education, if done well, is not necessarily inferior to a face to face class.
However, the anonymity of the internet still plagues me as a potential problem
for academic honesty. I worry regularly in my face to face classes about
plagiarism, and implement strategies to avoid it such as modifying paper
prompts so they are not easily copied and pasted from a source. I can imagine
many such similar strategies for an online class. Obviously I want to avoid any
quizzes of facts—information that can be quickly provided by a google search
instead of reading the assignment—and ask questions instead of synthesis and
analysis. In an online class, though, there is the additional question of who
is completing the work. I cannot physically see the student in class, hear
their voice, and get to know their tone in order to compare it to their
writing. I’ve caught plagiarism in the past because the writing simply didn’t
sound like that student’s.
I know this seems like an awfully suspicious attitude, and
perhaps the solution is simply a certain amount of trust that people are in
general honest. Then I read articles, though, about people like the “Shadow Scholar”
who custom write essays for money, and I wonder if the same type of person
doesn’t exist for completing online classes. Is there any way to know that the
students enrolled in the class are the ones gaining the knowledge they seem to
be? Or is this uncertainty something I just have to accept?