Think about this. All your instructor has to do is to take a sentence from 'your' term paper, do a search, and find the web site where you bought it. Quickest way to flunk I know of.
2007-01-07 09:18:55
·
answer #1
·
answered by Kokopelli 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
Nope. I teach college-age students however, and I've looked at sites where you can purchase them, and I've also checked out many samples online. I'd be humilated to put my name on most of the ones I've seen. They tend to be poorly written, and if a webmaster can't put together a professional site that's professionally written, why in the world would you expect him/her to sell you a professional product? Teachers who read a lot of essays are pretty good at guessing if a student wrote an essay or not, and they have many ways of deciding if a student wrote it or not. The only reason more students aren't busted is that a teacher has to take a great deal of personal time and effort to prove a student has plagiarized. The number of suspected plagiarists is much higher than the number of proven plagiarists. If your teacher has you answer any essays or other work in-class, be careful! Many college professors do this, copy them, and pass them back. Then if they have questions about what you can and can't produce yourself, they refer to in-class responses for comparison. They have other ways as well. And oh yeah, turnitin.com . Love that service.
2007-01-07 10:45:52
·
answer #2
·
answered by buffy s 2
·
1⤊
0⤋
By the time you re-word it enough to get past the content checkers educators-in-the-know use these days, you might as well read the material and write your own. And, if you don't know the material that well by now, why not just quit and save the old folks' money for that trailer you will surely need later on. ;-)
Oh, to answer your question, NO. I earned my engineering the degrees the good old fashioned way ... studying!
2007-01-07 09:26:11
·
answer #3
·
answered by jims2cents 3
·
1⤊
2⤋
Don't do it. Most colleges, highschools etc. use a website called turnitin.com and it can retrieve any work that is not yours. Be Smart!
2007-01-07 09:23:44
·
answer #4
·
answered by Cameka H 2
·
2⤊
0⤋