Recently, a professor at Rutgers University posted that a Chinese student in his class died in a car accident in mid-November, but continued to turn in homework and exams every day, which was creepy. The company’s main goal is to provide the best possible service to its customers.
The professor was very sad to hear about the death, “because we had email correspondence and she often came to my online courses”, however, “what happened afterwards was unexpected”.
The professor said that after the student’s death, she surprisingly continued to turn in assignments, take quizzes, and even email all the teachers, “Last Monday she turned in her final assignment for my class, and this week she turned in a couple of extra credit assignments, and I actually probably understood in my mind what was going on, but didn’t take any action.”
The incident scared other professors, and it went all the way to the dean of the college, and even the school administration became aware of it, and the university began asking the professor to cooperate with the investigation. The university began to ask the professor to cooperate with the investigation. It was then learned that the female university student had outsourced her exams and sign-ups to a gunman from an “online course escrow site.
The “online course escrow” provider used headlines such as “help for those who are not confident” and “escort for your studies” to attract a large number of international students, who were willing to pay money, give their student ID and school network account password, and find someone to take their video courses and submit reports for them.
The professor pointed out that during the Communist pneumonia epidemic, the industry chain of “online course management” has developed very well, providing customers with a “one-stop service”, as long as the password to the school website account to the operator, you can be on the score “The company’s website password can be handed over to the operator to get a B and an A. The professor said, “I’m not sure how things will develop after this time, but I have very mixed feelings now.”
Many Chinese netizens have left comments after learning about this, saying “I can imagine, but I don’t know what to say.” They said, “I can imagine such services escalating rapidly during the epidemic,” “I thought it was a story about a friend helping a deceased friend to fulfill his dream of education,” and “I saw many such ads years ago, so be careful when sending your children abroad. “.
For such things to happen, other international students expressed incomprehension: “I studied abroad when writing essays and doing homework to the most desperate times also did not think of looking for ghostwriters, simply do not dare to play this idea.” The first thing that I want to do is to spend so much energy to study abroad and pay such a high tuition fee, but if you even send emails to classes and contact your tutor with the help of ghostwriters, then what is the point of studying abroad for?” The reason for this is to get a diploma, because you have not learned anything and you have to pay someone to do your homework?
A Chinese student who enrolled in 2018 and has completed her master’s degree in business told Epoch Times that when she was studying at the University of New South Wales, most of the WeChat groups she joined had advertising messages touting essay writing and assignment writing services. More than 80 percent of her classmates were Chinese students.
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