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[CQ-Contest] cheating and ways to improve

To: cq-contest@contesting.com
Subject: [CQ-Contest] cheating and ways to improve
From: kr2q@optimum.net
Date: Sat, 15 Aug 2009 15:27:15 +0000 (GMT)
List-post: <cq-contest@contesting.com">mailto:cq-contest@contesting.com>
It is not just contesting.....and very from just the USA.
de Doug KR2Q


A Nation of Cheaters

By Kirk O. Hanson

January 19, 2003

Cheating. What could be more American? From the snake oil salesmen of the late 
19th century
to the stock manipulators of the 1920s to the spitballers of modern baseball. 
But today it seems 
absolutely everybody is doing it. We cheat—or at least try to cheat—in every 
aspect of our lives. 
One out of four Americans surveyed say it's acceptable to cheat on their taxes. 
Former Tyco 
CEO Dennis Kozlowski sends paintings he bought to a New Hampshire address to 
cheat New York 
State out of the sales tax. College bound students cheat on the SAT tests. 
Teachers cheat by 
giving their students the answers to standardized tests so the teachers qualify 
for bonuses. 
Athletes cheat by using performance-enhancing drugs. Successful authors cheat 
by 
appropriating others' writing as their own. Even colleges steeped in honor 
codes—the University 
of Virginia and the US Naval Academy—have been rocked by massive cheating 
scandals in recent 
years.

After a depressing 2002 in which corporate executives too numerous to count 
cheated 
shareholders by fudging their accounts or manipulating markets, we have to ask 
whether cheating 
has become the new national norm. We have always had a few cheaters among us, 
but has the 
typical American now lost his or her moral compass? Have we lost our 
fundamental commitment to 
integrity and fair play? First of all, why do people cheat? There are two 
simple answers, neither 
very noble. People cheat to get ahead, even if they don't qualify for the 
advancement and even 
if they can't win a fair competition. Such people don't care about anyone else 
but themselves. 
This adult lies about the toaster he broke so he can get a full refund. The 
teenager lies about 
her age to save money on a movie ticket. The other reason is simple laziness.

But there are new reasons why people cheat—and these may give us a clue about 
how to stop 
the rising tide of cheating. Some people cheat today because they simply cannot 
get everything 
done which needs to be done. American life has become so intense, so rushed, so 
fully packed. 
Many shortcuts we seek involve cheating—copying school papers from the Internet 
or cheating 
our companies by telling our bosses we are sick so we can catch up on housework 
or errands.

Some people cheat today not just because they want to get ahead, but more 
because they fear 
the embarrassment of failure. Parents put huge expectations on children—you are 
a failure if you 
don't go to an Ivy League school. You have to win; we've sacrificed so much to 
make you a 
competitive swimmer. Companies put huge pressures on employees—you now have to 
do the job 
of two, or you will be laid off too. And American culture says again and again 
that you have to be 
successful and wealthy to be happy. Faced with this fear of being a failure, 
too many people seek 
a shortcut and falsify their resume, cheat on their SATs, or fudge numbers at 
work to look better.

Most threatening, at least to me, is the notion that more people are cheating 
today because they 
think everyone else cheats. I had to cheat on the test, some students argue, 
because everyone 
else cheats and we are graded on a curve. Some business students I have taught 
and some business 
people believe that "everyone cheats" and that you have to do so to be 
competitive. The widespread 
corporate scandals of the past year, touching so many of our blue-chip 
companies, have reinforced 
this cynical belief that good guys will finish last.

Finally, an increasing number of cheaters are arguing that they must cheat to 
resist unfair new 
systems of accountability. Teachers in schools are resistant to 
performance-based testing because 
it may threaten their jobs. Employees cheat to resist systems that silently 
measure their output. 
Some welfare advocates resist needs-based tests because they may remove some 
people from 
the rolls. So how can we reset the nation's moral compass and stem the 
troubling rise of cheating? 
There are things you and I can do individually—and there are things that must 
be done by our leaders 
in government, business, education, and the media.

What can we individually do? The first thing is to stand up for fair play in 
our own lives. We must resist 
the temptations to take short cuts with small acts of cheating. Pay full price 
for your child if he or she 
is actually 13 and not 12. And we need to become advocates for fair play. Talk 
to our children about 
how important integrity and fair play is and how cheating hurts them—it does!

We need to support efforts to control cheating. If someone is caught cheating, 
support strong penalties. 
If our own child is caught cheating, resist the temptation to blame the school 
or the teacher. If an 
athlete is caught cheating, support the referee or the rules which throw him 
off the team. Become 
intolerant of cheating around you.

We can turn down the pressure felt by our own spouses and children. It is OK if 
your husband does 
not get the big promotion; it's OK if your son does not get into the "best" 
school. Life is about doing 
your best, not just about winning.

There are also important things our leaders in government, business, and the 
media can do to help 
fight cheating in American life.

The first is to put tougher national laws and regulations in place that deal 
with all forms of cheating. 
We also need the commitment to enforce those laws and to impose tough 
sanctions. This is a job of 
Congress, regulators, and the courts.

Second, each of our institutions—businesses, schools, athletic teams, and 
voluntary associations—need 
their own tough rules against cheating. University of Virginia officials and 
its student leaders have 
apparently pursued the dozens of cheating cases uncovered recently, 
strengthening their own honor 
code in the process. But Bausch and Lomb board members weakened the company's 
ethical culture, 
in my view, when they did not remove Ron Zarella as their CEO after it was 
revealed he had claimed 
a degree he did not have. Even sports-frenzied Notre Dame knew it had to get 
rid of a coach that 
lied on his resume.

Third, leaders in government and the private sector are going to have to invest 
in new systems to 
enforce standards against cheating, at least for a time. Government regulators 
and tax officials will 
have to do more audits. Employers will have to check the accuracy of all 
resumes. College teachers 
will have to use new on-line systems to check for plagiarism in papers.

Finally, I believe all our leaders—particularly those in the media—must 
contribute to building a new 
American culture in which wealth and celebrity are not the defining marks of 
success, but instead 
old-fashioned values such as integrity, faithfulness, and service to those in 
need. As long as Americans 
are chasing a dream defined by winning above all, they will continue to find 
new ways to cheat their 
way to the finish line.

The article appeared originally in the Boston Globe, Jan. 19, 2003.

Kirk O. Hanson is the Executive Director of the Markkula Center for Applied 
Ethics at Santa Clara University, 
and University Professor of Organizations & Society.
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