Should I tutor a student who I know has cheated on their homework? The Next CEO of Stack OverflowWhat are some good ways to lead a discussion session for a TA in a graduate-level STEM class?Lecturer in a course I'm TA'ing refuses to give feedback on student assignmentAs a tutor, should I encourage exploration at the risk of incorrect information?What to do if a student claims to have turned in the homework but I could not find it?Should I decline a request to tutor a class I will be taking?Should graduate students who are graders help undergraduate students with homework?Professor does not care about cheating, what should TA do?Professor not giving solutions to exams and assignments that I need to gradeWhat are the major ethical concerns with private tutoring?An undergraduate said they may hire a freelancer to do their work for them. What should I do?

How do I construct this japanese bowl?

Science fiction novels about a solar system spanning civilisation where people change their bodies at will

What can we do to stop prior company from asking us questions?

If the heap is initialized for security, then why is the stack uninitialized?

Only print output after finding pattern

What is meant by a M next to a roman numeral?

When airplanes disconnect from a tanker during air to air refueling, why do they bank so sharply to the right?

How to use tikz in fbox?

How do I go from 300 unfinished/half written blog posts, to published posts?

Anatomically Correct Strange Women In Ponds Distributing Swords

Is it a good idea to use COLUMN AS (left([Another_Column],(4)) instead of LEFT in the select?

Horror movie/show or scene where a horse creature opens its mouth really wide and devours a man in a stables

How do spells that require an ability check vs. the caster's spell save DC work?

The King's new dress

Example of a Mathematician/Physicist whose Other Publications during their PhD eclipsed their PhD Thesis

Return the Closest Prime Number

How do I solve this limit?

Removing read access from a file

Why here is plural "We went to the movies last night."

WOW air has ceased operation, can I get my tickets refunded?

What do "high sea" and "carry" mean in this sentence?

How do we know the LHC results are robust?

What does this shorthand mean?

What is the point of a new vote on May's deal when the indicative votes suggest she will not win?



Should I tutor a student who I know has cheated on their homework?



The Next CEO of Stack OverflowWhat are some good ways to lead a discussion session for a TA in a graduate-level STEM class?Lecturer in a course I'm TA'ing refuses to give feedback on student assignmentAs a tutor, should I encourage exploration at the risk of incorrect information?What to do if a student claims to have turned in the homework but I could not find it?Should I decline a request to tutor a class I will be taking?Should graduate students who are graders help undergraduate students with homework?Professor does not care about cheating, what should TA do?Professor not giving solutions to exams and assignments that I need to gradeWhat are the major ethical concerns with private tutoring?An undergraduate said they may hire a freelancer to do their work for them. What should I do?










12















I am a Ph.D. student and I do private tutoring on the side for extra income. Recently a new student contacted me for help with a class, and I met them for one session, which went well overall. They told me they liked my tutoring and want to meet again. This student admitted that they are behind on the course material and are trying to catch up before the final (which is just about two weeks away). However, I recently realized that this same student is in another class which I am TA'ing, and I was grading the homework today and realized they copied the solutions for the last assignment. I had suspected they may have copied solutions to the previous assignment as well but was unsure. This time the copying is blatant, word for word from the solutions from a past year. At this point I have no choice but to bring this to the course instructor (who is also my advisor), who I know will report this student for plagiarism. My question is, should I still meet this student and tutor them in other classes?



A few thoughts that come to mind:



  • I now know this student is in the course I am TA'ing. I feel tutoring them for this course would be a conflict of interest, and I would have to clear it with my advisor. Is it also a conflict of interest to tutor them for a different course, knowing I will be grading their exam/homework for this one?

  • I enjoy tutoring because I enjoy helping students learn, and I do like to help people succeed. In our previous session this student seemed interested in actually learning, but clearly has shown that they are willing to blatantly plagiarise homework solutions. While I do rely on my extra tutoring income, it feels unethical to tutor someone who cheats. At the same time, I would like them to be able to understand what they are doing so they don't feel any need to cheat. But this student also said they have not attended class in recent weeks (for what reason I do not know).

  • If I meet this student again, I will have to tell them that I have reported them for academic dishonesty. This isn't exactly an issue though, they can decide what they want to do from there.









share|improve this question

















  • 5





    Run. This is toxic. You've already made a mistake that could get you into trouble. Go to your advisor or whoever oversees the TA's and tell him everything as soon as possible and before you communicate with this student again.

    – B. Goddard
    4 hours ago






  • 3





    To paraphrase Dr. House, "everyone cheats".

    – A Simple Algorithm
    3 hours ago






  • 1





    Perhaps with a decent tutor the student would have no need to cheat? IOW, do you want to be part of the solution or do you want to pile onto the problems the student already has? With that said, I agree with others that your grading this student's assignments/tests and accepting money from them at the same time is a major problem; so my 2 questions probably aren't very applicable directly to you.

    – Dunk
    2 hours ago












  • @Dunk I agree, the primary issue is the conflict of interest, if not for that then I likely would still agree to tutor this student.

    – Kai
    12 mins ago















12















I am a Ph.D. student and I do private tutoring on the side for extra income. Recently a new student contacted me for help with a class, and I met them for one session, which went well overall. They told me they liked my tutoring and want to meet again. This student admitted that they are behind on the course material and are trying to catch up before the final (which is just about two weeks away). However, I recently realized that this same student is in another class which I am TA'ing, and I was grading the homework today and realized they copied the solutions for the last assignment. I had suspected they may have copied solutions to the previous assignment as well but was unsure. This time the copying is blatant, word for word from the solutions from a past year. At this point I have no choice but to bring this to the course instructor (who is also my advisor), who I know will report this student for plagiarism. My question is, should I still meet this student and tutor them in other classes?



A few thoughts that come to mind:



  • I now know this student is in the course I am TA'ing. I feel tutoring them for this course would be a conflict of interest, and I would have to clear it with my advisor. Is it also a conflict of interest to tutor them for a different course, knowing I will be grading their exam/homework for this one?

  • I enjoy tutoring because I enjoy helping students learn, and I do like to help people succeed. In our previous session this student seemed interested in actually learning, but clearly has shown that they are willing to blatantly plagiarise homework solutions. While I do rely on my extra tutoring income, it feels unethical to tutor someone who cheats. At the same time, I would like them to be able to understand what they are doing so they don't feel any need to cheat. But this student also said they have not attended class in recent weeks (for what reason I do not know).

  • If I meet this student again, I will have to tell them that I have reported them for academic dishonesty. This isn't exactly an issue though, they can decide what they want to do from there.









share|improve this question

















  • 5





    Run. This is toxic. You've already made a mistake that could get you into trouble. Go to your advisor or whoever oversees the TA's and tell him everything as soon as possible and before you communicate with this student again.

    – B. Goddard
    4 hours ago






  • 3





    To paraphrase Dr. House, "everyone cheats".

    – A Simple Algorithm
    3 hours ago






  • 1





    Perhaps with a decent tutor the student would have no need to cheat? IOW, do you want to be part of the solution or do you want to pile onto the problems the student already has? With that said, I agree with others that your grading this student's assignments/tests and accepting money from them at the same time is a major problem; so my 2 questions probably aren't very applicable directly to you.

    – Dunk
    2 hours ago












  • @Dunk I agree, the primary issue is the conflict of interest, if not for that then I likely would still agree to tutor this student.

    – Kai
    12 mins ago













12












12








12








I am a Ph.D. student and I do private tutoring on the side for extra income. Recently a new student contacted me for help with a class, and I met them for one session, which went well overall. They told me they liked my tutoring and want to meet again. This student admitted that they are behind on the course material and are trying to catch up before the final (which is just about two weeks away). However, I recently realized that this same student is in another class which I am TA'ing, and I was grading the homework today and realized they copied the solutions for the last assignment. I had suspected they may have copied solutions to the previous assignment as well but was unsure. This time the copying is blatant, word for word from the solutions from a past year. At this point I have no choice but to bring this to the course instructor (who is also my advisor), who I know will report this student for plagiarism. My question is, should I still meet this student and tutor them in other classes?



A few thoughts that come to mind:



  • I now know this student is in the course I am TA'ing. I feel tutoring them for this course would be a conflict of interest, and I would have to clear it with my advisor. Is it also a conflict of interest to tutor them for a different course, knowing I will be grading their exam/homework for this one?

  • I enjoy tutoring because I enjoy helping students learn, and I do like to help people succeed. In our previous session this student seemed interested in actually learning, but clearly has shown that they are willing to blatantly plagiarise homework solutions. While I do rely on my extra tutoring income, it feels unethical to tutor someone who cheats. At the same time, I would like them to be able to understand what they are doing so they don't feel any need to cheat. But this student also said they have not attended class in recent weeks (for what reason I do not know).

  • If I meet this student again, I will have to tell them that I have reported them for academic dishonesty. This isn't exactly an issue though, they can decide what they want to do from there.









share|improve this question














I am a Ph.D. student and I do private tutoring on the side for extra income. Recently a new student contacted me for help with a class, and I met them for one session, which went well overall. They told me they liked my tutoring and want to meet again. This student admitted that they are behind on the course material and are trying to catch up before the final (which is just about two weeks away). However, I recently realized that this same student is in another class which I am TA'ing, and I was grading the homework today and realized they copied the solutions for the last assignment. I had suspected they may have copied solutions to the previous assignment as well but was unsure. This time the copying is blatant, word for word from the solutions from a past year. At this point I have no choice but to bring this to the course instructor (who is also my advisor), who I know will report this student for plagiarism. My question is, should I still meet this student and tutor them in other classes?



A few thoughts that come to mind:



  • I now know this student is in the course I am TA'ing. I feel tutoring them for this course would be a conflict of interest, and I would have to clear it with my advisor. Is it also a conflict of interest to tutor them for a different course, knowing I will be grading their exam/homework for this one?

  • I enjoy tutoring because I enjoy helping students learn, and I do like to help people succeed. In our previous session this student seemed interested in actually learning, but clearly has shown that they are willing to blatantly plagiarise homework solutions. While I do rely on my extra tutoring income, it feels unethical to tutor someone who cheats. At the same time, I would like them to be able to understand what they are doing so they don't feel any need to cheat. But this student also said they have not attended class in recent weeks (for what reason I do not know).

  • If I meet this student again, I will have to tell them that I have reported them for academic dishonesty. This isn't exactly an issue though, they can decide what they want to do from there.






phd ethics teaching-assistant cheating tutoring






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked 8 hours ago









KaiKai

2219




2219







  • 5





    Run. This is toxic. You've already made a mistake that could get you into trouble. Go to your advisor or whoever oversees the TA's and tell him everything as soon as possible and before you communicate with this student again.

    – B. Goddard
    4 hours ago






  • 3





    To paraphrase Dr. House, "everyone cheats".

    – A Simple Algorithm
    3 hours ago






  • 1





    Perhaps with a decent tutor the student would have no need to cheat? IOW, do you want to be part of the solution or do you want to pile onto the problems the student already has? With that said, I agree with others that your grading this student's assignments/tests and accepting money from them at the same time is a major problem; so my 2 questions probably aren't very applicable directly to you.

    – Dunk
    2 hours ago












  • @Dunk I agree, the primary issue is the conflict of interest, if not for that then I likely would still agree to tutor this student.

    – Kai
    12 mins ago












  • 5





    Run. This is toxic. You've already made a mistake that could get you into trouble. Go to your advisor or whoever oversees the TA's and tell him everything as soon as possible and before you communicate with this student again.

    – B. Goddard
    4 hours ago






  • 3





    To paraphrase Dr. House, "everyone cheats".

    – A Simple Algorithm
    3 hours ago






  • 1





    Perhaps with a decent tutor the student would have no need to cheat? IOW, do you want to be part of the solution or do you want to pile onto the problems the student already has? With that said, I agree with others that your grading this student's assignments/tests and accepting money from them at the same time is a major problem; so my 2 questions probably aren't very applicable directly to you.

    – Dunk
    2 hours ago












  • @Dunk I agree, the primary issue is the conflict of interest, if not for that then I likely would still agree to tutor this student.

    – Kai
    12 mins ago







5




5





Run. This is toxic. You've already made a mistake that could get you into trouble. Go to your advisor or whoever oversees the TA's and tell him everything as soon as possible and before you communicate with this student again.

– B. Goddard
4 hours ago





Run. This is toxic. You've already made a mistake that could get you into trouble. Go to your advisor or whoever oversees the TA's and tell him everything as soon as possible and before you communicate with this student again.

– B. Goddard
4 hours ago




3




3





To paraphrase Dr. House, "everyone cheats".

– A Simple Algorithm
3 hours ago





To paraphrase Dr. House, "everyone cheats".

– A Simple Algorithm
3 hours ago




1




1





Perhaps with a decent tutor the student would have no need to cheat? IOW, do you want to be part of the solution or do you want to pile onto the problems the student already has? With that said, I agree with others that your grading this student's assignments/tests and accepting money from them at the same time is a major problem; so my 2 questions probably aren't very applicable directly to you.

– Dunk
2 hours ago






Perhaps with a decent tutor the student would have no need to cheat? IOW, do you want to be part of the solution or do you want to pile onto the problems the student already has? With that said, I agree with others that your grading this student's assignments/tests and accepting money from them at the same time is a major problem; so my 2 questions probably aren't very applicable directly to you.

– Dunk
2 hours ago














@Dunk I agree, the primary issue is the conflict of interest, if not for that then I likely would still agree to tutor this student.

– Kai
12 mins ago





@Dunk I agree, the primary issue is the conflict of interest, if not for that then I likely would still agree to tutor this student.

– Kai
12 mins ago










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















42














Whether their cheating should impact your role as a tutor is not the primary issue here, so I'll set it aside.



You should not be tutoring a student for money in one course that you are also grading as a TA in another course. That sets up a financial relationship between a grader and a student. That's a big problem.



I certainly don't believe you've done anything unethical here, but you should most likely report the inadvertent conflict and stop tutoring this student immediately (I'd also offer to your superiors that you return any payment for the one session, or just do it yourself anyways). It's not a big deal that you did this accidentally not realizing the connection. It could be a problem if you continued with it now that you know.






share|improve this answer
































    7














    Stop tutoring him. He's already shown he doesn't play by the rules. And this situation may "go sideways". Disengage ASAP. You don't want to get more enmeshed in this than you already unfortunately are. Things can rebound and hurt you. (Danger, Will Robinson, danger.)



    Tutoring is very much a side gig and completely optional for both parties. Disagree with the Buffy advice that you are obligated to continue. I also agree with Bryan's comment about the conflict of interest even without cheating. But I think the cheating situation raises the conflict of interest front and center.






    share|improve this answer










    New contributor




    guest is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.




















    • -1 for several reasons: 1. Whether or not the student plays by the rules is not a reason for him not to be tutored. 2. If anything, getting a tutor means the student is trying to get his act together rather than continuing his "life of crime".

      – einpoklum
      4 hours ago











    • This is so funny. Because he got a tutor, his same time frame cheating is changing? With that theory, I guess if I get a gym membership after buying roids, it shows I want to lift clean! Heck, if anything, I suspect that students that want/buy tutoring are (very, very mildly) correlated with students that cheat. (Or at least orthogonal. Definitely not anticorrelated.) After all, they need assistance.

      – guest
      3 hours ago



















    1














    I mostly agree with @BryanKrauze's answer, but I'll strength the point further:



    • It is unethical to tutor a student whom you are also teaching and grading.

    • It is doubly unethical if you're tutoring him/her for pay.

    In both cases you are in a conflict of interests, and in the latter case it is very significant.



    But since you're already conflicted, it's possible that it makes more sense for you to stop grading his HW (while continuing as a TA) rather than to stop tutoring him. I'd consult with the principal teacher for the course, or whoever is in charge of teaching in your department etc. - perhaps mention both options (not tutor him, not grade him). You might also need to have your previous gradings of his assignments reviewed.



    Finally, if you stop tutoring him, be kind - despite his cheating - and try to find an alternative tutor to take over for you, if you can, so that he can make a smooth transition. This is regardless of whether he is treated harshly or not for his cheating on a HW assignment in another course!






    share|improve this answer




















    • 1





      Let's see. You have one position that pays more, helps more people, and is a primary task. You have another that is self-sourced moonlighting. And in that one, you're tutoring a cheater. I vote for 86ing the cheater. Keep your regular TA gig.

      – guest
      3 hours ago











    • @guest: I didn't suggest not being a TA, just refraining from grading that one particular student. Like in the case of, say, a family member taking a class that you teach.

      – einpoklum
      2 hours ago











    • Never mind. youtube.com/watch?v=fZLeaSWY37I

      – guest
      2 hours ago



















    -3














    I don't believe you have an ethical issue in tutoring them. In fact, there may be issues if you don't. But otherwise, you seem to be doing the correct thing in communicating with the professor and telling the student about what you have done. It won't make you popular, of course.



    But, if you can help them learn and, more important, learn how to learn, maybe they won't be as inclined to cut corners.



    I also doubt that tutoring them in one course is in conflict with TA-ing them in another. Your professor, again, might have a different opinion, so you should ask. I don't think it is an especially difficult matter to keep the two relationships separate in a case like this.




    Note that you haven't given the evidence that they copied in the other course. I hope you have considered other explanations as well. Two identical papers is cause for an investigation, but not necessarily charges.






    share|improve this answer


















    • 7





      I don't agree with this answer at all. "In fact, there may be issues if you don't." What? How could there be? "It won't make you popular, of course." What is that -- peer pressure? "I also doubt that tutoring them in one course is in conflict with TA-ing them in another." I feel strongly that it is, and probably the student should also ask university personnel about it -- just because the professor thinks it's okay doesn't mean others higher up in the university will too. A professor is not an ethics master.

      – Pete L. Clark
      7 hours ago






    • 3





      "Note that you haven't given the evidence that they copied in the other course." Yes, of course the OP did. What other explanation do you entertain for word for word copying from a previous year's solution sheet? Anyway, the OP is not the one who makes the ruling on academic dishonesty: they did the right thing by reporting it.

      – Pete L. Clark
      7 hours ago






    • 2





      @PeteL.Clark, I would still require more evidence. Was the "copying" a few words or a lot? Was it an obvious answer that has few ways of being stated or not? Was the "solution" itself copied from another source, such as a textbook? Why would a student copy from a published answer to a past question anyway? It makes little sense. And why would a question be asked in the next year when solutions were published in the previous one? I don't dispute that the student may be cheating, but I don't have the evidence, nor the rules applied. Neither do you.

      – Buffy
      4 hours ago












    • Clear conflict-of-interest... "let's be real"...

      – paul garrett
      2 hours ago











    Your Answer








    StackExchange.ready(function()
    var channelOptions =
    tags: "".split(" "),
    id: "415"
    ;
    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
    StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
    createEditor();
    );

    else
    createEditor();

    );

    function createEditor()
    StackExchange.prepareEditor(
    heartbeatType: 'answer',
    autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
    convertImagesToLinks: true,
    noModals: true,
    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
    reputationToPostImages: 10,
    bindNavPrevention: true,
    postfix: "",
    imageUploader:
    brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
    contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
    allowUrls: true
    ,
    noCode: true, onDemand: true,
    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
    );



    );













    draft saved

    draft discarded


















    StackExchange.ready(
    function ()
    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2facademia.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f127214%2fshould-i-tutor-a-student-who-i-know-has-cheated-on-their-homework%23new-answer', 'question_page');

    );

    Post as a guest















    Required, but never shown

























    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes








    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    42














    Whether their cheating should impact your role as a tutor is not the primary issue here, so I'll set it aside.



    You should not be tutoring a student for money in one course that you are also grading as a TA in another course. That sets up a financial relationship between a grader and a student. That's a big problem.



    I certainly don't believe you've done anything unethical here, but you should most likely report the inadvertent conflict and stop tutoring this student immediately (I'd also offer to your superiors that you return any payment for the one session, or just do it yourself anyways). It's not a big deal that you did this accidentally not realizing the connection. It could be a problem if you continued with it now that you know.






    share|improve this answer





























      42














      Whether their cheating should impact your role as a tutor is not the primary issue here, so I'll set it aside.



      You should not be tutoring a student for money in one course that you are also grading as a TA in another course. That sets up a financial relationship between a grader and a student. That's a big problem.



      I certainly don't believe you've done anything unethical here, but you should most likely report the inadvertent conflict and stop tutoring this student immediately (I'd also offer to your superiors that you return any payment for the one session, or just do it yourself anyways). It's not a big deal that you did this accidentally not realizing the connection. It could be a problem if you continued with it now that you know.






      share|improve this answer



























        42












        42








        42







        Whether their cheating should impact your role as a tutor is not the primary issue here, so I'll set it aside.



        You should not be tutoring a student for money in one course that you are also grading as a TA in another course. That sets up a financial relationship between a grader and a student. That's a big problem.



        I certainly don't believe you've done anything unethical here, but you should most likely report the inadvertent conflict and stop tutoring this student immediately (I'd also offer to your superiors that you return any payment for the one session, or just do it yourself anyways). It's not a big deal that you did this accidentally not realizing the connection. It could be a problem if you continued with it now that you know.






        share|improve this answer















        Whether their cheating should impact your role as a tutor is not the primary issue here, so I'll set it aside.



        You should not be tutoring a student for money in one course that you are also grading as a TA in another course. That sets up a financial relationship between a grader and a student. That's a big problem.



        I certainly don't believe you've done anything unethical here, but you should most likely report the inadvertent conflict and stop tutoring this student immediately (I'd also offer to your superiors that you return any payment for the one session, or just do it yourself anyways). It's not a big deal that you did this accidentally not realizing the connection. It could be a problem if you continued with it now that you know.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 7 hours ago

























        answered 7 hours ago









        Bryan KrauseBryan Krause

        15k14267




        15k14267





















            7














            Stop tutoring him. He's already shown he doesn't play by the rules. And this situation may "go sideways". Disengage ASAP. You don't want to get more enmeshed in this than you already unfortunately are. Things can rebound and hurt you. (Danger, Will Robinson, danger.)



            Tutoring is very much a side gig and completely optional for both parties. Disagree with the Buffy advice that you are obligated to continue. I also agree with Bryan's comment about the conflict of interest even without cheating. But I think the cheating situation raises the conflict of interest front and center.






            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




            guest is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.




















            • -1 for several reasons: 1. Whether or not the student plays by the rules is not a reason for him not to be tutored. 2. If anything, getting a tutor means the student is trying to get his act together rather than continuing his "life of crime".

              – einpoklum
              4 hours ago











            • This is so funny. Because he got a tutor, his same time frame cheating is changing? With that theory, I guess if I get a gym membership after buying roids, it shows I want to lift clean! Heck, if anything, I suspect that students that want/buy tutoring are (very, very mildly) correlated with students that cheat. (Or at least orthogonal. Definitely not anticorrelated.) After all, they need assistance.

              – guest
              3 hours ago
















            7














            Stop tutoring him. He's already shown he doesn't play by the rules. And this situation may "go sideways". Disengage ASAP. You don't want to get more enmeshed in this than you already unfortunately are. Things can rebound and hurt you. (Danger, Will Robinson, danger.)



            Tutoring is very much a side gig and completely optional for both parties. Disagree with the Buffy advice that you are obligated to continue. I also agree with Bryan's comment about the conflict of interest even without cheating. But I think the cheating situation raises the conflict of interest front and center.






            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




            guest is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.




















            • -1 for several reasons: 1. Whether or not the student plays by the rules is not a reason for him not to be tutored. 2. If anything, getting a tutor means the student is trying to get his act together rather than continuing his "life of crime".

              – einpoklum
              4 hours ago











            • This is so funny. Because he got a tutor, his same time frame cheating is changing? With that theory, I guess if I get a gym membership after buying roids, it shows I want to lift clean! Heck, if anything, I suspect that students that want/buy tutoring are (very, very mildly) correlated with students that cheat. (Or at least orthogonal. Definitely not anticorrelated.) After all, they need assistance.

              – guest
              3 hours ago














            7












            7








            7







            Stop tutoring him. He's already shown he doesn't play by the rules. And this situation may "go sideways". Disengage ASAP. You don't want to get more enmeshed in this than you already unfortunately are. Things can rebound and hurt you. (Danger, Will Robinson, danger.)



            Tutoring is very much a side gig and completely optional for both parties. Disagree with the Buffy advice that you are obligated to continue. I also agree with Bryan's comment about the conflict of interest even without cheating. But I think the cheating situation raises the conflict of interest front and center.






            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




            guest is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.










            Stop tutoring him. He's already shown he doesn't play by the rules. And this situation may "go sideways". Disengage ASAP. You don't want to get more enmeshed in this than you already unfortunately are. Things can rebound and hurt you. (Danger, Will Robinson, danger.)



            Tutoring is very much a side gig and completely optional for both parties. Disagree with the Buffy advice that you are obligated to continue. I also agree with Bryan's comment about the conflict of interest even without cheating. But I think the cheating situation raises the conflict of interest front and center.







            share|improve this answer










            New contributor




            guest is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.









            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited 3 hours ago





















            New contributor




            guest is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.









            answered 6 hours ago









            guestguest

            1122




            1122




            New contributor




            guest is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.





            New contributor





            guest is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.






            guest is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.












            • -1 for several reasons: 1. Whether or not the student plays by the rules is not a reason for him not to be tutored. 2. If anything, getting a tutor means the student is trying to get his act together rather than continuing his "life of crime".

              – einpoklum
              4 hours ago











            • This is so funny. Because he got a tutor, his same time frame cheating is changing? With that theory, I guess if I get a gym membership after buying roids, it shows I want to lift clean! Heck, if anything, I suspect that students that want/buy tutoring are (very, very mildly) correlated with students that cheat. (Or at least orthogonal. Definitely not anticorrelated.) After all, they need assistance.

              – guest
              3 hours ago


















            • -1 for several reasons: 1. Whether or not the student plays by the rules is not a reason for him not to be tutored. 2. If anything, getting a tutor means the student is trying to get his act together rather than continuing his "life of crime".

              – einpoklum
              4 hours ago











            • This is so funny. Because he got a tutor, his same time frame cheating is changing? With that theory, I guess if I get a gym membership after buying roids, it shows I want to lift clean! Heck, if anything, I suspect that students that want/buy tutoring are (very, very mildly) correlated with students that cheat. (Or at least orthogonal. Definitely not anticorrelated.) After all, they need assistance.

              – guest
              3 hours ago

















            -1 for several reasons: 1. Whether or not the student plays by the rules is not a reason for him not to be tutored. 2. If anything, getting a tutor means the student is trying to get his act together rather than continuing his "life of crime".

            – einpoklum
            4 hours ago





            -1 for several reasons: 1. Whether or not the student plays by the rules is not a reason for him not to be tutored. 2. If anything, getting a tutor means the student is trying to get his act together rather than continuing his "life of crime".

            – einpoklum
            4 hours ago













            This is so funny. Because he got a tutor, his same time frame cheating is changing? With that theory, I guess if I get a gym membership after buying roids, it shows I want to lift clean! Heck, if anything, I suspect that students that want/buy tutoring are (very, very mildly) correlated with students that cheat. (Or at least orthogonal. Definitely not anticorrelated.) After all, they need assistance.

            – guest
            3 hours ago






            This is so funny. Because he got a tutor, his same time frame cheating is changing? With that theory, I guess if I get a gym membership after buying roids, it shows I want to lift clean! Heck, if anything, I suspect that students that want/buy tutoring are (very, very mildly) correlated with students that cheat. (Or at least orthogonal. Definitely not anticorrelated.) After all, they need assistance.

            – guest
            3 hours ago












            1














            I mostly agree with @BryanKrauze's answer, but I'll strength the point further:



            • It is unethical to tutor a student whom you are also teaching and grading.

            • It is doubly unethical if you're tutoring him/her for pay.

            In both cases you are in a conflict of interests, and in the latter case it is very significant.



            But since you're already conflicted, it's possible that it makes more sense for you to stop grading his HW (while continuing as a TA) rather than to stop tutoring him. I'd consult with the principal teacher for the course, or whoever is in charge of teaching in your department etc. - perhaps mention both options (not tutor him, not grade him). You might also need to have your previous gradings of his assignments reviewed.



            Finally, if you stop tutoring him, be kind - despite his cheating - and try to find an alternative tutor to take over for you, if you can, so that he can make a smooth transition. This is regardless of whether he is treated harshly or not for his cheating on a HW assignment in another course!






            share|improve this answer




















            • 1





              Let's see. You have one position that pays more, helps more people, and is a primary task. You have another that is self-sourced moonlighting. And in that one, you're tutoring a cheater. I vote for 86ing the cheater. Keep your regular TA gig.

              – guest
              3 hours ago











            • @guest: I didn't suggest not being a TA, just refraining from grading that one particular student. Like in the case of, say, a family member taking a class that you teach.

              – einpoklum
              2 hours ago











            • Never mind. youtube.com/watch?v=fZLeaSWY37I

              – guest
              2 hours ago
















            1














            I mostly agree with @BryanKrauze's answer, but I'll strength the point further:



            • It is unethical to tutor a student whom you are also teaching and grading.

            • It is doubly unethical if you're tutoring him/her for pay.

            In both cases you are in a conflict of interests, and in the latter case it is very significant.



            But since you're already conflicted, it's possible that it makes more sense for you to stop grading his HW (while continuing as a TA) rather than to stop tutoring him. I'd consult with the principal teacher for the course, or whoever is in charge of teaching in your department etc. - perhaps mention both options (not tutor him, not grade him). You might also need to have your previous gradings of his assignments reviewed.



            Finally, if you stop tutoring him, be kind - despite his cheating - and try to find an alternative tutor to take over for you, if you can, so that he can make a smooth transition. This is regardless of whether he is treated harshly or not for his cheating on a HW assignment in another course!






            share|improve this answer




















            • 1





              Let's see. You have one position that pays more, helps more people, and is a primary task. You have another that is self-sourced moonlighting. And in that one, you're tutoring a cheater. I vote for 86ing the cheater. Keep your regular TA gig.

              – guest
              3 hours ago











            • @guest: I didn't suggest not being a TA, just refraining from grading that one particular student. Like in the case of, say, a family member taking a class that you teach.

              – einpoklum
              2 hours ago











            • Never mind. youtube.com/watch?v=fZLeaSWY37I

              – guest
              2 hours ago














            1












            1








            1







            I mostly agree with @BryanKrauze's answer, but I'll strength the point further:



            • It is unethical to tutor a student whom you are also teaching and grading.

            • It is doubly unethical if you're tutoring him/her for pay.

            In both cases you are in a conflict of interests, and in the latter case it is very significant.



            But since you're already conflicted, it's possible that it makes more sense for you to stop grading his HW (while continuing as a TA) rather than to stop tutoring him. I'd consult with the principal teacher for the course, or whoever is in charge of teaching in your department etc. - perhaps mention both options (not tutor him, not grade him). You might also need to have your previous gradings of his assignments reviewed.



            Finally, if you stop tutoring him, be kind - despite his cheating - and try to find an alternative tutor to take over for you, if you can, so that he can make a smooth transition. This is regardless of whether he is treated harshly or not for his cheating on a HW assignment in another course!






            share|improve this answer















            I mostly agree with @BryanKrauze's answer, but I'll strength the point further:



            • It is unethical to tutor a student whom you are also teaching and grading.

            • It is doubly unethical if you're tutoring him/her for pay.

            In both cases you are in a conflict of interests, and in the latter case it is very significant.



            But since you're already conflicted, it's possible that it makes more sense for you to stop grading his HW (while continuing as a TA) rather than to stop tutoring him. I'd consult with the principal teacher for the course, or whoever is in charge of teaching in your department etc. - perhaps mention both options (not tutor him, not grade him). You might also need to have your previous gradings of his assignments reviewed.



            Finally, if you stop tutoring him, be kind - despite his cheating - and try to find an alternative tutor to take over for you, if you can, so that he can make a smooth transition. This is regardless of whether he is treated harshly or not for his cheating on a HW assignment in another course!







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited 2 hours ago

























            answered 3 hours ago









            einpoklumeinpoklum

            25.1k240143




            25.1k240143







            • 1





              Let's see. You have one position that pays more, helps more people, and is a primary task. You have another that is self-sourced moonlighting. And in that one, you're tutoring a cheater. I vote for 86ing the cheater. Keep your regular TA gig.

              – guest
              3 hours ago











            • @guest: I didn't suggest not being a TA, just refraining from grading that one particular student. Like in the case of, say, a family member taking a class that you teach.

              – einpoklum
              2 hours ago











            • Never mind. youtube.com/watch?v=fZLeaSWY37I

              – guest
              2 hours ago













            • 1





              Let's see. You have one position that pays more, helps more people, and is a primary task. You have another that is self-sourced moonlighting. And in that one, you're tutoring a cheater. I vote for 86ing the cheater. Keep your regular TA gig.

              – guest
              3 hours ago











            • @guest: I didn't suggest not being a TA, just refraining from grading that one particular student. Like in the case of, say, a family member taking a class that you teach.

              – einpoklum
              2 hours ago











            • Never mind. youtube.com/watch?v=fZLeaSWY37I

              – guest
              2 hours ago








            1




            1





            Let's see. You have one position that pays more, helps more people, and is a primary task. You have another that is self-sourced moonlighting. And in that one, you're tutoring a cheater. I vote for 86ing the cheater. Keep your regular TA gig.

            – guest
            3 hours ago





            Let's see. You have one position that pays more, helps more people, and is a primary task. You have another that is self-sourced moonlighting. And in that one, you're tutoring a cheater. I vote for 86ing the cheater. Keep your regular TA gig.

            – guest
            3 hours ago













            @guest: I didn't suggest not being a TA, just refraining from grading that one particular student. Like in the case of, say, a family member taking a class that you teach.

            – einpoklum
            2 hours ago





            @guest: I didn't suggest not being a TA, just refraining from grading that one particular student. Like in the case of, say, a family member taking a class that you teach.

            – einpoklum
            2 hours ago













            Never mind. youtube.com/watch?v=fZLeaSWY37I

            – guest
            2 hours ago






            Never mind. youtube.com/watch?v=fZLeaSWY37I

            – guest
            2 hours ago












            -3














            I don't believe you have an ethical issue in tutoring them. In fact, there may be issues if you don't. But otherwise, you seem to be doing the correct thing in communicating with the professor and telling the student about what you have done. It won't make you popular, of course.



            But, if you can help them learn and, more important, learn how to learn, maybe they won't be as inclined to cut corners.



            I also doubt that tutoring them in one course is in conflict with TA-ing them in another. Your professor, again, might have a different opinion, so you should ask. I don't think it is an especially difficult matter to keep the two relationships separate in a case like this.




            Note that you haven't given the evidence that they copied in the other course. I hope you have considered other explanations as well. Two identical papers is cause for an investigation, but not necessarily charges.






            share|improve this answer


















            • 7





              I don't agree with this answer at all. "In fact, there may be issues if you don't." What? How could there be? "It won't make you popular, of course." What is that -- peer pressure? "I also doubt that tutoring them in one course is in conflict with TA-ing them in another." I feel strongly that it is, and probably the student should also ask university personnel about it -- just because the professor thinks it's okay doesn't mean others higher up in the university will too. A professor is not an ethics master.

              – Pete L. Clark
              7 hours ago






            • 3





              "Note that you haven't given the evidence that they copied in the other course." Yes, of course the OP did. What other explanation do you entertain for word for word copying from a previous year's solution sheet? Anyway, the OP is not the one who makes the ruling on academic dishonesty: they did the right thing by reporting it.

              – Pete L. Clark
              7 hours ago






            • 2





              @PeteL.Clark, I would still require more evidence. Was the "copying" a few words or a lot? Was it an obvious answer that has few ways of being stated or not? Was the "solution" itself copied from another source, such as a textbook? Why would a student copy from a published answer to a past question anyway? It makes little sense. And why would a question be asked in the next year when solutions were published in the previous one? I don't dispute that the student may be cheating, but I don't have the evidence, nor the rules applied. Neither do you.

              – Buffy
              4 hours ago












            • Clear conflict-of-interest... "let's be real"...

              – paul garrett
              2 hours ago















            -3














            I don't believe you have an ethical issue in tutoring them. In fact, there may be issues if you don't. But otherwise, you seem to be doing the correct thing in communicating with the professor and telling the student about what you have done. It won't make you popular, of course.



            But, if you can help them learn and, more important, learn how to learn, maybe they won't be as inclined to cut corners.



            I also doubt that tutoring them in one course is in conflict with TA-ing them in another. Your professor, again, might have a different opinion, so you should ask. I don't think it is an especially difficult matter to keep the two relationships separate in a case like this.




            Note that you haven't given the evidence that they copied in the other course. I hope you have considered other explanations as well. Two identical papers is cause for an investigation, but not necessarily charges.






            share|improve this answer


















            • 7





              I don't agree with this answer at all. "In fact, there may be issues if you don't." What? How could there be? "It won't make you popular, of course." What is that -- peer pressure? "I also doubt that tutoring them in one course is in conflict with TA-ing them in another." I feel strongly that it is, and probably the student should also ask university personnel about it -- just because the professor thinks it's okay doesn't mean others higher up in the university will too. A professor is not an ethics master.

              – Pete L. Clark
              7 hours ago






            • 3





              "Note that you haven't given the evidence that they copied in the other course." Yes, of course the OP did. What other explanation do you entertain for word for word copying from a previous year's solution sheet? Anyway, the OP is not the one who makes the ruling on academic dishonesty: they did the right thing by reporting it.

              – Pete L. Clark
              7 hours ago






            • 2





              @PeteL.Clark, I would still require more evidence. Was the "copying" a few words or a lot? Was it an obvious answer that has few ways of being stated or not? Was the "solution" itself copied from another source, such as a textbook? Why would a student copy from a published answer to a past question anyway? It makes little sense. And why would a question be asked in the next year when solutions were published in the previous one? I don't dispute that the student may be cheating, but I don't have the evidence, nor the rules applied. Neither do you.

              – Buffy
              4 hours ago












            • Clear conflict-of-interest... "let's be real"...

              – paul garrett
              2 hours ago













            -3












            -3








            -3







            I don't believe you have an ethical issue in tutoring them. In fact, there may be issues if you don't. But otherwise, you seem to be doing the correct thing in communicating with the professor and telling the student about what you have done. It won't make you popular, of course.



            But, if you can help them learn and, more important, learn how to learn, maybe they won't be as inclined to cut corners.



            I also doubt that tutoring them in one course is in conflict with TA-ing them in another. Your professor, again, might have a different opinion, so you should ask. I don't think it is an especially difficult matter to keep the two relationships separate in a case like this.




            Note that you haven't given the evidence that they copied in the other course. I hope you have considered other explanations as well. Two identical papers is cause for an investigation, but not necessarily charges.






            share|improve this answer













            I don't believe you have an ethical issue in tutoring them. In fact, there may be issues if you don't. But otherwise, you seem to be doing the correct thing in communicating with the professor and telling the student about what you have done. It won't make you popular, of course.



            But, if you can help them learn and, more important, learn how to learn, maybe they won't be as inclined to cut corners.



            I also doubt that tutoring them in one course is in conflict with TA-ing them in another. Your professor, again, might have a different opinion, so you should ask. I don't think it is an especially difficult matter to keep the two relationships separate in a case like this.




            Note that you haven't given the evidence that they copied in the other course. I hope you have considered other explanations as well. Two identical papers is cause for an investigation, but not necessarily charges.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 7 hours ago









            BuffyBuffy

            55k16175268




            55k16175268







            • 7





              I don't agree with this answer at all. "In fact, there may be issues if you don't." What? How could there be? "It won't make you popular, of course." What is that -- peer pressure? "I also doubt that tutoring them in one course is in conflict with TA-ing them in another." I feel strongly that it is, and probably the student should also ask university personnel about it -- just because the professor thinks it's okay doesn't mean others higher up in the university will too. A professor is not an ethics master.

              – Pete L. Clark
              7 hours ago






            • 3





              "Note that you haven't given the evidence that they copied in the other course." Yes, of course the OP did. What other explanation do you entertain for word for word copying from a previous year's solution sheet? Anyway, the OP is not the one who makes the ruling on academic dishonesty: they did the right thing by reporting it.

              – Pete L. Clark
              7 hours ago






            • 2





              @PeteL.Clark, I would still require more evidence. Was the "copying" a few words or a lot? Was it an obvious answer that has few ways of being stated or not? Was the "solution" itself copied from another source, such as a textbook? Why would a student copy from a published answer to a past question anyway? It makes little sense. And why would a question be asked in the next year when solutions were published in the previous one? I don't dispute that the student may be cheating, but I don't have the evidence, nor the rules applied. Neither do you.

              – Buffy
              4 hours ago












            • Clear conflict-of-interest... "let's be real"...

              – paul garrett
              2 hours ago












            • 7





              I don't agree with this answer at all. "In fact, there may be issues if you don't." What? How could there be? "It won't make you popular, of course." What is that -- peer pressure? "I also doubt that tutoring them in one course is in conflict with TA-ing them in another." I feel strongly that it is, and probably the student should also ask university personnel about it -- just because the professor thinks it's okay doesn't mean others higher up in the university will too. A professor is not an ethics master.

              – Pete L. Clark
              7 hours ago






            • 3





              "Note that you haven't given the evidence that they copied in the other course." Yes, of course the OP did. What other explanation do you entertain for word for word copying from a previous year's solution sheet? Anyway, the OP is not the one who makes the ruling on academic dishonesty: they did the right thing by reporting it.

              – Pete L. Clark
              7 hours ago






            • 2





              @PeteL.Clark, I would still require more evidence. Was the "copying" a few words or a lot? Was it an obvious answer that has few ways of being stated or not? Was the "solution" itself copied from another source, such as a textbook? Why would a student copy from a published answer to a past question anyway? It makes little sense. And why would a question be asked in the next year when solutions were published in the previous one? I don't dispute that the student may be cheating, but I don't have the evidence, nor the rules applied. Neither do you.

              – Buffy
              4 hours ago












            • Clear conflict-of-interest... "let's be real"...

              – paul garrett
              2 hours ago







            7




            7





            I don't agree with this answer at all. "In fact, there may be issues if you don't." What? How could there be? "It won't make you popular, of course." What is that -- peer pressure? "I also doubt that tutoring them in one course is in conflict with TA-ing them in another." I feel strongly that it is, and probably the student should also ask university personnel about it -- just because the professor thinks it's okay doesn't mean others higher up in the university will too. A professor is not an ethics master.

            – Pete L. Clark
            7 hours ago





            I don't agree with this answer at all. "In fact, there may be issues if you don't." What? How could there be? "It won't make you popular, of course." What is that -- peer pressure? "I also doubt that tutoring them in one course is in conflict with TA-ing them in another." I feel strongly that it is, and probably the student should also ask university personnel about it -- just because the professor thinks it's okay doesn't mean others higher up in the university will too. A professor is not an ethics master.

            – Pete L. Clark
            7 hours ago




            3




            3





            "Note that you haven't given the evidence that they copied in the other course." Yes, of course the OP did. What other explanation do you entertain for word for word copying from a previous year's solution sheet? Anyway, the OP is not the one who makes the ruling on academic dishonesty: they did the right thing by reporting it.

            – Pete L. Clark
            7 hours ago





            "Note that you haven't given the evidence that they copied in the other course." Yes, of course the OP did. What other explanation do you entertain for word for word copying from a previous year's solution sheet? Anyway, the OP is not the one who makes the ruling on academic dishonesty: they did the right thing by reporting it.

            – Pete L. Clark
            7 hours ago




            2




            2





            @PeteL.Clark, I would still require more evidence. Was the "copying" a few words or a lot? Was it an obvious answer that has few ways of being stated or not? Was the "solution" itself copied from another source, such as a textbook? Why would a student copy from a published answer to a past question anyway? It makes little sense. And why would a question be asked in the next year when solutions were published in the previous one? I don't dispute that the student may be cheating, but I don't have the evidence, nor the rules applied. Neither do you.

            – Buffy
            4 hours ago






            @PeteL.Clark, I would still require more evidence. Was the "copying" a few words or a lot? Was it an obvious answer that has few ways of being stated or not? Was the "solution" itself copied from another source, such as a textbook? Why would a student copy from a published answer to a past question anyway? It makes little sense. And why would a question be asked in the next year when solutions were published in the previous one? I don't dispute that the student may be cheating, but I don't have the evidence, nor the rules applied. Neither do you.

            – Buffy
            4 hours ago














            Clear conflict-of-interest... "let's be real"...

            – paul garrett
            2 hours ago





            Clear conflict-of-interest... "let's be real"...

            – paul garrett
            2 hours ago

















            draft saved

            draft discarded
















































            Thanks for contributing an answer to Academia Stack Exchange!


            • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

            But avoid


            • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

            • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

            To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




            draft saved


            draft discarded














            StackExchange.ready(
            function ()
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2facademia.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f127214%2fshould-i-tutor-a-student-who-i-know-has-cheated-on-their-homework%23new-answer', 'question_page');

            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown





















































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown

































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown







            Popular posts from this blog

            Log på Navigationsmenu

            Wonderful Copenhagen (sang) Eksterne henvisninger | NavigationsmenurSide på frankloesser.comWonderful Copenhagen

            Detroit Tigers Spis treści Historia | Skład zespołu | Sukcesy | Członkowie Baseball Hall of Fame | Zastrzeżone numery | Przypisy | Menu nawigacyjneEncyclopedia of Detroit - Detroit TigersTigers Stadium, Detroit, MITigers Timeline 1900sDetroit Tigers Team History & EncyclopediaTigers Timeline 1910s1935 World Series1945 World Series1945 World Series1984 World SeriesComerica Park, Detroit, MI2006 World Series2012 World SeriesDetroit Tigers 40-Man RosterDetroit Tigers Coaching StaffTigers Hall of FamersTigers Retired Numberse