You know what I find to be the most awful form of immorality and irresponsibility? Cheating. Especially when students cheat. I never took an honors or an AP class until my Junior year, and I was actually surprised by the huge increase of cheating from a prep class to an AP class. At first, I thought it would stop after a while. But it never did - students would cheat on every exam, every assignment, every little piece of work. It started to really bother me, and lately, as college acceptances come, it's started to always be on my mind. As senior year slows down for the students, it speeds up for the teachers and now as we are probably the least motivated, we have the most work. I think this year I have seen more cheating than ever, and it bothers me. These thoughts lurk in the back of my conscience at every moment of the day. They hide in the shadows, though, because I cannot always decide what I should do about cheating and how I ought to react to certain situations.
Now, I am not going to pretend like I've never copied someone elses' answers for a problem or whispered to my friend during a French test. I think we all have. But, for me, cheating has been increasingly rare since I started high school. What really irks me is those kids who cheat every single day, the ones who never study and get A's off of someone ele's brain. What has wounded me more than anything, though, is that so many of these students have gotten into fantastic colleges. I have been almost completely honest throughout high school when I didn't do something. I take the failing grade on an assignment when I deserve it - because I need to be responsible for my own work. So, when someone gets into Stanford or UCI or USC and I have watched them cheat their way through school, it's kind of painful for me to watch. Then these students ridicule others and brag about how they got into great schools and they did it through others' work. Am I the only one that sees this as a problem?
Mr. Dhennin, the French teacher at our school, has told me many times that these kids will get their punishment for it once they get to college or go into the working world. I can't guarantee that, though, and Monsieur's promise of this has not fully reassured me. Philosophically and morally, I am entirely opposed to cheating on anything at all. If they cheat now, I hope for them that they learn to do things the right way. As a student, I have been told indirectly that you don't "rat other people out" for cheating. Thus, I never have. Nevetheless, when kids in Chemistry steal Mrs. Haus' stamp so that they can give themselves 100% on every homework assignment and get an A and when students constantly copy each others' math homework or when someone copies their test answers for a friend that was absent, I start to become annoyed. Most people my age think there's no reason for these feelings of exasperation towards cheaters, but I'd like to thing that some people will change their minds.
I believe that if one holds themselves morally accountable, they should not cheat. Getting A from someone else's work or through dishonest means is no accomplishment. I feel like we learn more when we actually fail. Some students would definitely try harder if they refused to cheat. I know that I have, and I will continue to. I hope that people learn to hold themselves responsible and culpable for their grades and actions. It's not cool that you cheat and get away with it, even if you got into a good school. Maybe I'm one of few teenagers that feels this way, but I am definitely going to stick with it.