Ok, I was taking this class online and the teacher suspected me of cheating. I assured him that the information was readily available on the textbook publisher's website but he wouldn't believe me. He told me he was going to drop me from the class. Now it's the end of the semester and he hasn't dropped me and this is going to kill my GPA because I didn't do any work since September. He dropped all of the homework grades but kept my test grades. If he dropped me at the last test I would have a 79 in the course, but now I have a 24. Is he required to retroactively give me a WP for this class? Remember, he never had enough proof to say I was cheating but he questioned my integrity and he told the dean he was going to have me removed from the course.
12/13/2007 11:52:22 PM
Just for emphasis - this is an accounting class - of course my equations and ledgers are going to look like the ones in the book - the book comes with a CD full of templates for you to use
12/13/2007 11:54:23 PM
talk to your advisor
12/14/2007 12:22:58 AM
I'll try talking to her, but hopefully I won't be going to school there next semester. I moved away since I started taking classes at the beginning of the semester.The teacher emailed me back and said he wasn't changing anything. [Edited on December 14, 2007 at 8:45 AM. Reason : grrr]
12/14/2007 8:44:47 AM
He would have had to prove that I was cheating. It probably would have been better if you had fought it early on because now you're most likely screwed.
12/14/2007 9:25:55 AM
If he told you he was going to drop you from the course via email then I would use that. This all sounds very fucked up to me, whether you cheated or not. I would talk to a department head and if that didn't work I would go straight to the dean.
12/14/2007 9:41:03 AM
An instructor can't just drop you from a class. They don't have that kind of control over their class enrollment. I'm sure it can be done if they fill out enough paperwork, but you would have to be actively involved in the process at some point.
12/14/2007 10:47:25 AM
The whole guilty until proven innocent comment is true, but if the professor clearly said he was removing you from his class I see that as all the evidence you need to have that class/grade removed from your schedule. A prof. does have the capability of removing a student from a class with the proper paperwork being filed so there is no reason not to believe him/her. With that being said the prof. obviously lied about the actions that they were going to take against you so their accusations should be viewed as false as well. I wouldn't let this shit hit my GPA, but thats just me. This is also how people find a hooded stranger waiting next to their car late one night holding a tire iron.
12/14/2007 11:11:20 AM
Right now its your fault until you talk to the dean or someone higher than your teacher, cause for all they know right now, you're just another student who failed because you didn't drop your class on the deadline. They may have no idea that your teacher did what he did, unless you were there to actually witness him speaking to higher about it, or higher talked to you. He could've just threatened and not followed through. You'd best be prepared to defend yourself (to higher) when you go in i.e. with the printed equations from the cd, the book, your old hw's, etc. Raise hell but dont go overboard, you've got nothing to lose on this.
12/14/2007 12:31:45 PM