Tag: PLAGIARISM

  • UNICAL retires professor for alleged plagiarism

    The University of Calabar (UNICAL) has expelled 33 students for alleged examination malpractice. The Vice-Chancellor (VC), Prof Zana Akpagu, made this known during a briefing.

    A professor, the VC said, was also retired by the Senate for plagiarism.

    Prof Akpagu said the development was in line with his mission to rid the school of indiscipline and restore its academic glory. He reiterated management’s stance against corruption, saying: “The affected students and staff are shown the way out to restore discipline and integrity.”

    He said UNICAL was the only school offering a course on anti-corruption, noting that the course was introduced in collaboration with the Independent Corrupt Practice and other Allied Matters Commission (ICPC) to inculcate good values in students.

    The Pro-chancellor, Dr Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu, who is also the chairman of the Governing Council, said the council supported the anti-corruption crusade of the VC, noting that it was in line with President Muhammadu Buhari-led administration’s anti-graft policy.

    Iwuanyanwu said: “There is corruption everywhere. Our professors and intellectuals should sit down and formulate strategies to curb academic corruption. We must create platform to stop abuse of students by lecturers. We have to discourage sorting and bribery by academic staff. We don’t want corruption to be mentioned with the name of this university.”

    Iwuanyanwu challenged the university staff and students to report corrupt practice wherever they notice it. He said such would help the management to drive its policy of making the school the best in Africa.

  • EKSU VC warns against plagiarism

    The Vice Chancellor, Ekiti State University, EKSU, Ado-Ekiti, Prof.  Oladipo Aina, has charged lecturers and students of the university to abstain from plagiarism.

    Aina made the remarks while declaring open a workshop on Research Methodology and Scholarship Grants organised by the Institute of Peace, Security and Governance of the university.

    Prof Aina said students and the lecturers must be original in all researches in order to prove themselves.

    He further noted that the mission and vision of the institute is to bring a positive change and solution to the current security and peace challenges facing the nation, through research methodologies of modern standards.

    In his address, the director of the institute, Prof. Kunle Ajayi, said the workshop is meant to expose to sources of scholarship and grants, and how they can access them to gain knowledge on academic honesty, ethics in research and on issues of plagiarism. Ajayi added that the students will be exposed to a unified research methodology in peace and security research, public administration and corporate management.

    In the first plenary session, the Provost, College of Postgraduate Studies, EKSU,  Prof. Dipo Ogunleye, who spoke on Research Methodologies in Peace, Security and Governance, added that the idea is to teach how to write thesis  in social science, looking at the importance of research, the structure, topic and how to identify a problem for solution.

    Ogunleye said if there is no good methodology, nothing good will be achieved in any research, adding that in literature review, a researcher has to integrate everything in his or her research.

     

  • Linda Ikeji: matters arising

    Linda Ikeji: matters arising

    My understanding of plagiarism is when you take someone’s work and republish it verbatim as your own work. I don’t do that. But if I have ever done that in the past then I apologize. It was an oversight. I admit that I have used photos without giving credit. I apologize. That will never happen again. You learn every day. And I have learnt from this.

    The above quotation is by Linda Ikeji, publisher of lindaikeji.blogspot.com responding to the re-opening of her blog by Google.

    I am a fan of Linda Ikeji, Nigeria’s undisputed leading blogger, not necessary her blog, for one particular reason. The young lady has made a huge success of a task many journalists and others have dismissed as idle indulgence.

    While many traditional journalists are still pontificating about who is the real professional or not, Linda and her clan of digital natives have perfected the act of redefining publishing in a new media age.

    I appreciate the concerns about the excesses and violations by many bloggers and online writers but the truth is that information dissemination can never be the same again. Journalists used to be called gatekeepers but there are no more gates for information in newsrooms with mobile phones and social media now available for citizens.

    When the news broke last week about almighty Google shutting down Linda’s blog for alleged plagiarism, the reactions of her critics was that she got what she deserved, having been accused in the past of publishing  unattributed reports from other sources.

    Linda’s apology at the beginning of this piece should suffice for those insist that she is guilty as charged, even when she claims that the shutting down of her has nothing to do will plagiarism but  a breakdown of communication between her and a friend who has been involved in the development of her blog in the past who now felt ignored.

    To be sure, Linda is not the only one guilty of plagiarism of one kind or the other in the country. Virtually every medium including the traditional media have used materials from other sources without proper attribution.

    Violation of copyrights has become so common in the country that someone noted that copyright in Nigeria means to copy rightly.

    Notwithstanding that there are so many culprits doesn’t make it right. It is wrong for anyone to pass on another person’s job as his or hers. Materials from other sources must not only be properly attributed, but necessary permission should be sought.

    I recently wrote a story about the General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, Pastor E.A Adeboye saying that he was not interested in living up to 100 which was published on The Nation Newspaper website www.staging.thenationonlineng.net.

    Many blogs and websites including Linda’s republished the story with the exact quotes in my story without acknowledging The Nation as their source.

    Publications republishing exclusive reports of another publication without permission, however long it takes to be authorised to do so, are guilty of ‘ reaping from where they did not sow’.

    There is need to begin to name and shame publications indulging in unrestrained plagiarism and copyright violations to encourage more original contents instead of repetition of the same ‘exclusive’ reports across websites and blogs.

  • High plagiarism level worries essay judge

    The winners’ row at this year’s Mike Okonkwo Essay Competition held at the MUSON Centre, Onikan, was unusually scanty last Thursday. There were only three winners to be rewarded instead of the usual 10.

    In past editions, the top 10 winners graced the occasion with large contingents from their schools for the prize-giving held as part of the Bishop Mike Okonkwo annual lecture programme. However, this year was different.

    Chief Examiner for the competition, Prof Akachi Ezeigbo soon revealed why in her Examiner’s Report. She said the judges were disappointed to find that most of the best of the 2,185 entries received from secondary school pupils all over Nigeria were products of plagiarism while those that were not were of poor quality.

    As a result, the professor of English from the University of Lagos (UNILAG) said not up to 10 candidates of the lot who wrote on the topic: Overcoming the Nigerian security challenges: A panacea for national growth and development, could be short listed for the second stage of the competition.

    She said: “Unlike in previous years, the quality of entries for this year’s competition is rather low. The evidence of copying, collaboration, lifting from newspapers, textbooks, the internet and other electronic sources which we see in the entries for this year is not just higher In relation to previous years, but has assumed a frightening dimension to warrant a call for some intervention.

    “Not only have our students perfected the habit of uncritical derivation of materials from sources they are unwilling to acknowledge, they have also learnt to shamelessly present the materials as their own work. One is inclined to think that teachers and parents are actively aiding the practice through collaboration or deliberately overlooking it. The immediate result of this phenomenon was that we were unable to get the usual 10 essays on which to base the second leg of the competition. We only managed to get five.”

    Prof Ezeigbo also said two out of the five essayists who were shortlisted for the second stage performed poorly under examination condition when they were told to write on: Solving the problems of examination malpractices in the Nigerian educational system.

    “Two candidates who scored high marks during the first stage could not defend their performance. We found enough evidence in the performance at the second leg of the competition to show that they had obtained help in the main examination,” she said.

    Lamenting the judges’ findings, Bishop Mike Okonkwo, the Presiding Bishop of The Redeemed Evangelical Mission (TREM) in whose honour the competition is organised yearly, said Nigeria should look to nursery school pupils for redemption.

    “Just ordinary essay competition, see how students copied. We need to go to the kindergarten and nursery schools to begin to raise a fresh crop of Nigerians that will put it in their minds that integrity pays. If we are looking at the people in secondary school and tertiary levels, we are wasting our time,” Bishop Okonkwo, who turned 68 the next day, said.

    Winners of the competition also condemned the malpractice, saying that it is not ultimately in the interest of the pupils.

    First prize winner, Folatomi Alli-Balogun of Vivian Fowler Memorial College for Girls, who was rewarded with N100,000, laptop, trophy, plaque prizes as well as three computers and printer for her school, said she would have been unsatisfied with copying other people’s work. She said pupils may be inspired by others but should learn to be creative on their own.

    “If you are looking at your work and what you have written is not yours, you don’t get satisfaction. You can read textbooks and use the internet as inspiration. For my essay, there was a lot of pressure on me to excel because my school enters every year. I was a bit hard on myself and wrote and cancelled twice before I wrote something I was satisfied with, she said.

    Praising the transparency of the competition, second-placed winner, Mark Nwanbiankea of the Lagos State Senior Model College, Badore said pupils who work hard excel. He added that his English teacher, Mrs Olusola Shobola, taught him to not to lift work from the internet.

    “I feel privileged to have gone to a school where we do not lift (copy) other people’s work. We have a programme we do on assembly called Impromptu, where you are called out to speak on any topic without prior preparation. My English teacher is one of the people who helped me and taught me to write without lifting from the internet,” said Mark, who was rewarded with N75,000, a plaque and two computers for his school.

    Third place winner, Samuel Edet of Government Technical College, Calabar, who got N50,000, a plaque and a computer for his school, said his elder brother taught him to acknowledge owners of original work appropriately.

    “If I had used another person’s work, I would have acknowledged my source to give credit to the original owner. My elder brother taught me to do so. He does a lot of writing and he is my mentor,” he said.

    Describing the practice of ‘helping’ pupils as inappropriate, some teachers and parents told The Nation that it undermines the abilities of those so assisted.

    Mrs Omotayo Alli-Balogun, mother of the over all best essayist, said such students pay for such misdeeds in future.

    “Parents who cut corners for their children are not helping them. They will not be with them forever. At one point in time, nemesis will catch up with them,” she said.

    Folatomi’s teacher, Mrs Chinyere Udunwa, said pupils who are helped are not inspired to succeed.

    “We don’t write essays for any child; we give them proper guidance and you marvel at what they can do. There is a tendency for children to want to be spoon-fed but task them and you will be surprised,” she said.

    Principal of the Lagos State Senior Model College, Badore, Mrs Zainab Abdulkareem said all members of the society should join hands to fight malpractice.

    “We don’t allow cheating in my school; that is why Mark could come back better. By the time all hands come to fight it, it will reduce. It is a phenomenon that all schools are involved in,” she said.

    Folatomi’s winning essay was in many ways like the lecture delivered by guest speaker, Dr Kalu Idika Kalu at the event.

    The former Minister of Finance and National Planning described how insecurity in Nigeria has negatively affected peace, stability and socio-economic development.

    He linked these failings to the disrespect for the rule of law which if supreme, would ensure that wrong doings are punished.

    To tackle insecurity, Kalu said Nigeria has to first address problems of “poor leadership, bad politics, poor governance, inadequate dispensation of justice and entrenched cronyism.”

    In her essay, Folatomi urged all Nigerians to work for the peace and progress of the country.

    “Every citizen can combat insecurity and insurgency, and bring about peace by working hand in hand with security operators to analyse the under-takers that are slowly putting our nation to sleep, and conquer them,” she wrote in her conclusion.