EDiine and TurnItIn

Anonymous
But if Larla doesn't have her paper added, she can give it to Charlotte next year and it won't be flagged plagiarism.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:But if Larla doesn't have her paper added, she can give it to Charlotte next year and it won't be flagged plagiarism.


Come up with original assignments then!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:But if Larla doesn't have her paper added, she can give it to Charlotte next year and it won't be flagged plagiarism.


Come up with original assignments then!


Omg! You people are so mean and rude to teachers and you know nothing about the job. The county dictates a majority of the writing assignments! So that kids at Whitman have the same curriculum/ assignments as the kids at Gaithersburg. So if Joe's cousin Sam is in the same grade and Joe gets an A on his paper, he could turn around and e-mail it to Sam. Turn it in would in theory catch this if their teachers both use it. Cheating is immoral, not Turn it in keeping a database. You are strange. Why do you care if they put the paper in their database?
Anonymous
Don't know anything... (Should say) I hate typing on the phone
Anonymous
PP probably thinks her snowflake is writing papers so creative that no other person has ever had the same idea and Turnitin is exploiting her kid.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:But if Larla doesn't have her paper added, she can give it to Charlotte next year and it won't be flagged plagiarism.


Come up with original assignments then!


Omg! You people are so mean and rude to teachers and you know nothing about the job. The county dictates a majority of the writing assignments! So that kids at Whitman have the same curriculum/ assignments as the kids at Gaithersburg. So if Joe's cousin Sam is in the same grade and Joe gets an A on his paper, he could turn around and e-mail it to Sam. Turn it in would in theory catch this if their teachers both use it. Cheating is immoral, not Turn it in keeping a database. You are strange. Why do you care if they put the paper in their database?


My wife was a teacher. Her assignments varied enough year to year that the same paper would not suffice for the next year. I care about a paper going into a database because that is making money of the child.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:But if Larla doesn't have her paper added, she can give it to Charlotte next year and it won't be flagged plagiarism.


Come up with original assignments then!


Omg! You people are so mean and rude to teachers and you know nothing about the job. The county dictates a majority of the writing assignments! So that kids at Whitman have the same curriculum/ assignments as the kids at Gaithersburg. So if Joe's cousin Sam is in the same grade and Joe gets an A on his paper, he could turn around and e-mail it to Sam. Turn it in would in theory catch this if their teachers both use it. Cheating is immoral, not Turn it in keeping a database. You are strange. Why do you care if they put the paper in their database?


My wife was a teacher. Her assignments varied enough year to year that the same paper would not suffice for the next year. I care about a paper going into a database because that is making money of the child.


They aren't selling a copy of your kid's masterpiece online.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:But if Larla doesn't have her paper added, she can give it to Charlotte next year and it won't be flagged plagiarism.


Come up with original assignments then!


Omg! You people are so mean and rude to teachers and you know nothing about the job. The county dictates a majority of the writing assignments! So that kids at Whitman have the same curriculum/ assignments as the kids at Gaithersburg. So if Joe's cousin Sam is in the same grade and Joe gets an A on his paper, he could turn around and e-mail it to Sam. Turn it in would in theory catch this if their teachers both use it. Cheating is immoral, not Turn it in keeping a database. You are strange. Why do you care if they put the paper in their database?


My wife was a teacher. Her assignments varied enough year to year that the same paper would not suffice for the next year. I care about a paper going into a database because that is making money of the child.


They aren't selling a copy of your kid's masterpiece online.



They are using the metadata as a source of income. I object to that.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:But if Larla doesn't have her paper added, she can give it to Charlotte next year and it won't be flagged plagiarism.


Come up with original assignments then!


Omg! You people are so mean and rude to teachers and you know nothing about the job. The county dictates a majority of the writing assignments! So that kids at Whitman have the same curriculum/ assignments as the kids at Gaithersburg. So if Joe's cousin Sam is in the same grade and Joe gets an A on his paper, he could turn around and e-mail it to Sam. Turn it in would in theory catch this if their teachers both use it. Cheating is immoral, not Turn it in keeping a database. You are strange. Why do you care if they put the paper in their database?


My wife was a teacher. Her assignments varied enough year to year that the same paper would not suffice for the next year. I care about a paper going into a database because that is making money of the child.


Your wife clearly wasn't teaching the newer county curriculum, then. There are specific writing prompts used as benchmarks across all schools teaching that course. The teacher can't simply change the prompt because that would screw up the data.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:But if Larla doesn't have her paper added, she can give it to Charlotte next year and it won't be flagged plagiarism.


Come up with original assignments then!


Omg! You people are so mean and rude to teachers and you know nothing about the job. The county dictates a majority of the writing assignments! So that kids at Whitman have the same curriculum/ assignments as the kids at Gaithersburg. So if Joe's cousin Sam is in the same grade and Joe gets an A on his paper, he could turn around and e-mail it to Sam. Turn it in would in theory catch this if their teachers both use it. Cheating is immoral, not Turn it in keeping a database. You are strange. Why do you care if they put the paper in their database?


My wife was a teacher. Her assignments varied enough year to year that the same paper would not suffice for the next year. I care about a paper going into a database because that is making money of the child.


Your wife clearly wasn't teaching the newer county curriculum, then. There are specific writing prompts used as benchmarks across all schools teaching that course. The teacher can't simply change the prompt because that would screw up the data.



My wife was teaching to the newest curriculum. There can be enough change to know the same papers can't be submitted twice consistently.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:But if Larla doesn't have her paper added, she can give it to Charlotte next year and it won't be flagged plagiarism.


Come up with original assignments then!


Omg! You people are so mean and rude to teachers and you know nothing about the job. The county dictates a majority of the writing assignments! So that kids at Whitman have the same curriculum/ assignments as the kids at Gaithersburg. So if Joe's cousin Sam is in the same grade and Joe gets an A on his paper, he could turn around and e-mail it to Sam. Turn it in would in theory catch this if their teachers both use it. Cheating is immoral, not Turn it in keeping a database. You are strange. Why do you care if they put the paper in their database?


My wife was a teacher. Her assignments varied enough year to year that the same paper would not suffice for the next year. I care about a paper going into a database because that is making money of the child.


Your wife clearly wasn't teaching the newer county curriculum, then. There are specific writing prompts used as benchmarks across all schools teaching that course. The teacher can't simply change the prompt because that would screw up the data.



My wife was teaching to the newest curriculum. There can be enough change to know the same papers can't be submitted twice consistently.


How can she do that when there are required, specifically worded writing prompts that are not supposed to be altered in any way? If she changed them, then she offered a different assessment than the other teachers of the same course, skewing County data.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:But if Larla doesn't have her paper added, she can give it to Charlotte next year and it won't be flagged plagiarism.


Come up with original assignments then!


Omg! You people are so mean and rude to teachers and you know nothing about the job. The county dictates a majority of the writing assignments! So that kids at Whitman have the same curriculum/ assignments as the kids at Gaithersburg. So if Joe's cousin Sam is in the same grade and Joe gets an A on his paper, he could turn around and e-mail it to Sam. Turn it in would in theory catch this if their teachers both use it. Cheating is immoral, not Turn it in keeping a database. You are strange. Why do you care if they put the paper in their database?


My wife was a teacher. Her assignments varied enough year to year that the same paper would not suffice for the next year. I care about a paper going into a database because that is making money of the child.


Your wife clearly wasn't teaching the newer county curriculum, then. There are specific writing prompts used as benchmarks across all schools teaching that course. The teacher can't simply change the prompt because that would screw up the data.



My wife was teaching to the newest curriculum. There can be enough change to know the same papers can't be submitted twice consistently.


How can she do that when there are required, specifically worded writing prompts that are not supposed to be altered in any way? If she changed them, then she offered a different assessment than the other teachers of the same course, skewing County data.


Plus, her system may prevent students copying papers given to her, but it does nothing to prevent copying from students at other schools, like the cousins example.
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