Volume 54, Issue 10
Friday, May 29, 2015
801 West Kensington Road, Mount Prospect, Illinois 60056
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The
Prospector Faking the gr de 22 percent of students use their iPad or phone to cheat
97 percent
of students think grades, rather than education, have become the main focus in school gr
26 percent of
Student actors
Prospect’s theater program has put on three productions this year. To learn about students’ individual experiences turn to ...
11 Entertainment
See CHEATING, page 2
Jerbi retires after 29 years at Prospect By Jack Gabriel
6 Features
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This also makes it harder for Schnell to provide valuable feedback. “When you’re grading, you feel like you’re being more detective than trying to help people understand information,” Schnell said. “You’re just trying to say, ‘Am I catching you cheating, or am I trying to give you some feedback so that you’ll understand?’” Because of this, Schnell now has a new rule that all homework assignments must be handwritten either on paper or on Notability. Also, there are clear homework deadlines, and if a student misses a deadline, they are not eligible to take the next partner retake test. If a student is caught cheating on a homework assignment, they still must do the assignment again on their own
News Editor
Students have origins worldwide. To read about students’ global adventures to visit family, flip to ...
students ask friends what’s on the test before taking it
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classes. At the beginning of the year in the class, students would ask their classmates to send them a copy of their completed homework, and then those students would turn it in as their own. About five to six assignments per class were the result of copying. “It’s just rampant,” Schnell said. “I’ve had multiple occasions this year where students are just turning in other people’s stuff ... I had one student who I was watching in class literally taking somebody else’s work … and [trying] to trace over the letters to make it look like he had written it. I have lots of stuff that gets turned in with the same answer wrong on 10 pages in a row [on] 10 separate submissions … Cheaters drive me nuts.”
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students look at other students’ papers during tests
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*information is from a survey of 151 students
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admitted to cheating by asking others what is on a test and copying homework. Twenty-six percent said they look at other students’ papers during tests, and 22 percent use their phone or iPad to cheat during tests. All these students cheat at least once a month, if not more. “It’s your own choice if you want to cheat, and you know the consequences of it,” Jackson said. “I know I’ve cheatBy Shreya Thakkar ed ... but it’s because I wanted to know Editor-in-Chief the answer. It’s not because it felt morally OK to do it.” *Name changed for confidentiality Although Jackson felt guilty at first, it doesn’t bother her much now. Having three tests the next day and “I feel a little guilty, but then only one night to study meant thenagain I feel like I had to do it because freshman Natalie Jackson* had some I want to do [well, especially with] the choices to make. She decided not to pressure from home,” Jackson said. study for her AP Human Geography “[When] I’m just taking a normal test (APHG) quiz on culture so she could foand don’t get caught, I feel, ‘Well, whatcus on Geometry and Biology. ever, I didn’t get caught.” During the APHG iPad quiz the next According to Associate Principal day, Jackson gave into the temptation Scott McDermott, this pressure to do to look up the answer to one question well is self-imposed and doesn’t come in a separate tab. However, Schoology from teachers. However, he believes automatically shut her out of the quiz cheating is not the answer. and Hodges approached her after class “There are kids about it. that feel that they’re “I knew I had not adequately predone something “I’ve cheated ... but pared and [cheatwrong, but I didn’t ing is] the way they really want to own it’s because I wanted need to go about it,” up to [it],” Jackson to know the answer. McDermott said. said. “But I knew it “That’s a decision was the right thing It’s not because it felt that they’re makto do.” ing, [but] it’s not the morally OK to do it.” After Jackson right decision.” explained her situaWhile McDertion, Hodges was unanonymous junior mott has not rederstanding yet disceived more reports appointed. Because of cheating with she cheated, he gave iPads than he used her a zero on the quiz. to get when students didn’t have iPads, That incident kept Jackson from 75 percent of students believe iPads cheating the rest of freshman year, but make it easier to cheat. she started cheating again sophomore AP World History teacher Dave year because of the stress of her classSchnell is one of many teachers who have es. Now as a junior, she does it about been struggling to combat that. Copying once a month. homework through the iPad has been a However, Jackson is not alone. Out problem this year in AP World History of a survey of 151 students, 78 percent
Students wrestle with morality, guilt of cheating
Prospect cheating statistics
After 29 years of working at Prospect, P.E. Area Assistant David Jerbi has seen it all. From the field house fire in 1995 to the three state football championships in 2001, 2002 and 2005, according to Jerbi, one thing has stayed the same: the students. “The physical building has changed a lot: the [athletic training room] was not here. The locker rooms were different. The commons as you know it did not exist,” Jerbi said. “[But] the students here have always been great. I cannot say anything bad about the students.” After all of his time at Prospect, Jerbi is retiring. “Many reasons [led to my decision to retire], but basically, I’ve been involved in education for 37 years now. And it’s time to go,” Jerbi said. “It’s time to move on and get something else in my life going.” After Prospect, Jerbi is looking forward to getting more involved in Boy Scouts, reading more and sleeping in. As an Eagle Scout himself, Jerbi is looking forward to helping out more with Boy Scouts.
SECOND HOME: P.E. Area Assistant David Jerbi reminisces on his 29 years at Prospect as he will retire this year. “That fieldhouse has been my home for the past few years, and I’m going to miss that,” Jerbi said. (photo by Lauren Miller) In Boy Scouts, Jerbi helps the scouts get their merit badges and climb through the ranks. After a scout completes a rank, they have to do a board of review with Jerbi. During these, Jerbi and the scout go over the scout’s progress and sign off on their advancement. “After becoming an Eagle
Scout myself, I really wanted to get more involved [in Boy Scouts],” Jerbi said. “Now I can do what I really want to do.” According to Assistant Principal Jovan Lazarevic, it will be hard to see Jerbi retire. Working as an Assistant Athletic Trainer for most of his time at Prospect, Jerbi
hopes to have made a positive impact on the students. According to Lazarevic, Jerbi has been able to help students in sports and P.E. alike. “I hope that I have helped [students] in the training room by getting them back from their injuries,” Jerbi said. “I hope, from the P.E. end, that I’ve taught them some responsibility [by] keeping them accountable.” Not only has Jerbi impacted Prospect, but Prospect has also taught him a few things. Throughout his time at Prospect, Jerbi developed a sense of patience along with time management. Jerbi also made lasting connections with students and staff who will be hard to leave. “I think [I’m going to miss] the students and the staff that I’ve worked with the most,” Jerbi said. “The field house has been my home for the past few years, and I’m going to miss that, too.” Jerbi hopes to be remembered positively at Prospect. “Hopefully I’ll be remembered as someone who cared,” Jerbi said. “I care about the students, and hopefully I made a difference in their life. That’s all I am hoping for.”