What value is there in cheating?
- Share via
This past week, the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce honored the best
and brightest of that town’s high school and college students and
student athletes during a morning award breakfast.
The accomplishments of these young hopefuls are stunning and
awe-inspiring and their futures are nothing short of brilliant. The
same can be said of the top achievers from Newport Harbor and Corona
del Mar high schools, honored just a few weeks ago by the Newport
Beach chamber.
Unfortunately, though, the polar opposite of these students
garnered headlines recently as authorities placed at least one
17-year-old under arrest on suspicion of cracking into the Corona del
Mar high computer system to change grades for as many as seven
students. There could be more arrests to come.
That one student, who faces felony charges and has been placed on
five-day suspension, must surely be asking now if it was all worth
it.
The refreshing thing is, all he had to do was ask his peers to
find out.
We were more than heartened to read some of the responses of those
at Corona del Mar high who had heard of the cheating scandal.
“It’s shocking,” freshman Amber Peck said. “Why don’t you just
study instead of changing your grades? And then you don’t have to
worry about being caught.”
“I think it was really stupid,” said another freshman, Jessika
Kelly. “Why don’t you just study for a test? If you cheat you won’t
learn anything. That’s why we go to school, [to learn].”
We couldn’t have said it any better.
Those who cheat the system do a double disservice. They hurt
themselves by failing to see right from wrong and by missing out on
what a high school education is all about.
And, they create an unfair playing field by attempting to reap the
rewards of hard work without doing it. How could they possibly expect
to receive the same grade as those who study and work long and hard
for their grades?
Those who cheat are only fooling themselves. It is not long before
they are discovered and when they are, often it results in a scarlet
letter that is almost impossible to remove. The world of business is
full of stories of careers ruined by cheating or unethical behavior.
The answer to the above question seems pretty clear. It most
certainly is not worth it to cheat.
But thankfully, as our award honorees and student peers prove, the
transgressions of a few do not outweigh the achievements of the many.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.