Joseph Ellin's Commentary on "Request From a Former Student"
I
Prof. Nice is asked by a former student, Jason, to send a
copy of a report they had worked on together. Should Nice
comply? Why not? No reason is given for not sending the report:
a mere question of courtesy, one would think.
II
We are now told that Nice doesn't like the report and
doesn't much care for Jason either. But he sends the report
anyway, only to discover years later that Jason has plagiarized
it for his MA thesis. There is no problem here either:
plagiarism should be investigated and punished. Nice must
initiate an investigation through the appropriate authorities
at Jason's university. As to what he could have done to prevent
this from happening, there are several things. He might have
earlier protected himself a bit by indicating on the report
that it had copyright protection: "Not for publication. Do not
quote without permission." He might assure himself that his
students understand what plagiarism is and why it's wrong. He
might ascertain that his university has appropriate policies in
place. These are more management problems than ethical ones;
the ethical point is to try to create conditions such that
ethical violations such as Jason's are less likely to occur. It
means not trusting people to the extent Nice would like to; but
when the protections are in place, you can then be free to
trust them more.
Cite this page:
"Joseph Ellin's Commentary on "Request From a Former Student""
Online Ethics Center for Engineering
8/17/2006
National Academy of Engineering
Accessed: Wednesday, February 08, 2012
<www.onlineethics.org/Resources/Cases/Former/FormerEllin.aspx>