volume 54, Issue 2 October 28, 2015
Walt whitman High school
7100 whittier boulevard
Bethesda, maryland 20817
theblackandwhite.net
Alternative college app to open for students starting next year
by Jason Grill
Seniors sweep Battle of the Classes Senior Noah Abramowitz grimaces during tug-of-war as senior Colin Sullivan cheers him on at Battle of the Classes Oct. 20. Check out the back page for a collage of photos from Homecoming Week. Photo by TOMAS CASTRO
Cheating in the classroom: a look at the how’s and why’s by Rachel Friedman and Jennah Haque
Y
ou have a history reading guide due every day this week, you’ve only annotated one chapter of Lord of the Flies and the chemistry solubility rules are becoming one giant blur. How will you get it all done? Cheat. In the face of academic stress, a large majority of students resorts to cheating. In a poll given earlier this month to 240 Whitman English students across all grade and course levels, 78 percent of students said they had cheated on homework and 52 percent on a test. Because of these overwhelming numbers, teachers have enacted measures to combat both creative and traditional methods of cheating. Once your test is over and the bell rings, you join the huddle of kids whispering carefully outside the classroom. Inside, the teacher stares through the window in the door. Later, he notices the kids in third period are mysteriously performing better than first period. What does he do? He gets creative. Several teachers set up dividers between students, some crack
down on skipping the period of the test and some require students to put their backpacks in the front of the room. Making different forms of tests prevents cheating within a class and within groups of friends. At lunch, you find your best friend, who’s lucky enough to have the test during eighth period. You know the drill: You recall every question and every topic you can remember from the test, and your friend thinks she’s staring at a 100 percent. But this time your teacher is one step ahead. Changing the test as the day goes on helps prevent a “trickle down” effect. “Let’s say I give a test first period, as soon as they walk out the door, they’re talking about it,” math teacher Jim Kuhn said, calling the situation “an unfair advantage.” “I’m just trying to create a fair playing field,” he said. Thirty-eight percent of students said they’ve found out what’s on a test before taking it. One common tool against plagiarism is turnitin.com, for which Whitman pays $6,000 a year, principal Alan Goodwin said. Students turn their assignments in to the web-
site, which checks for originality. Some teachers take preemptive action a step further. Science teacher Sean Reid is careful to check the floor area around students and clears their calculators before tests. He also checks the outside of calculators for formulas and other writing. “I think you have to really be careful about the spacing of desks when students are testing,” Reid said. “This allows you to tell the difference between simple movements and attempts of cheating.” Preventive measures are as extreme or minimal as teachers see fit in order to protect academic integrity, he said. Some teachers place their faith in students’ morals. “I tend to trust people,” social studies teacher Kirk Shipley said. “I like to think that there’s a mutual respect, where I’m going to trust you not to cheat, and you’re going to trust me to teach and care about you.” Many students aren’t particularly good at cheating, Shipley finds. continued on pages
Q&A with U.S. Tresaurer Rosie Gumataotao Rios Page 6
continued on page
Talking Barbie: cute doll or artificial intelligence? Page 7
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Girls tennis division champs, best season since 2011
by Ezra Pine
The last time the girls tennis team beat the rival Wootton Patriots, RGIII was a potential Heisman candidate, Tim Tebow was a starting quarterback in the NFL and the NBA was in a lockout. When the Vikings defeated the Patriots 4–3 for the first time since 2011 in their fifth match this season, they left one clear message to the rest of the county: they’re here to stay. “The Wootton match set the tone for the rest of the season,” coach Jasen Gohn said. “They hadn’t lost a match in nearly three years. That let everyone know we’re an elite team.” Gohn, who didn’t coach last year while on paternity leave, started coaching the girls team in 2013. He has also coached boys tennis for thirteen years and counting. Under his leadership, the team downed all of its opponents. In half of the team’s matches, they won 7–0. They boasted a 12–0 record in the regular season, their first undefeated season since 2011. Seniors Miranda Tompkins, Emily Myers and Anna Marcus have played on the team for four years. Ending their high school careers on a historic note made for an especially exciting season, one Tompkins called “awesome”. The team got a huge boost with the addition of first singles player Carina Greenberg, who lost only two matches during the season. Greenberg, who moved from Texas this year, has proved herself to be one of the top singles players in the state. continued on page
Inside Look MCPS high schools to install solar panels Page 3
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Starting next year, the Common Application will have some competition when it comes to how students to apply to college. A coalition of colleges and universities is offering a new application. This application through the Coalition website will allow students to collect assignments they’ve completed throughout high school and collaborate with counselors, teachers and college admissions officers on an online platform. The application was created by the Coalition for Access, Affordability, and Success, a group of 83 schools, including all of the Ivy League schools, the University of Maryland and several other top public and private universities., The new application process is an effort to decrease inequality in college admissions and increase the ability of schools to personalize their applications. Right now, a majority of high-achieving, low-income students don’t apply to elite schools, reported a 2012 study by the National Bureau of Economic Research The coalition hopes to change this. “We want to send a strong message that college is affordable, that they can be successful, and that the top schools in the country want students like them,” the coalition explains on their website. Though the application won’t be fully released until this summer, many features are already known. One of the most notable is an online “locker,” where students can store assignments and projects they’ve completed throughout high school, which they can then use as part of their application. These materials could take the place of the supplemental essays that many schools require, or they could serve as an inspiration to students when they answer application questions, the coalition suggests.
Rockville thrift store provides jobs for the mentally ill Page 10
Washington Capitals spends day with crew team Page 13
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