Home > Student Faces Expulsion over Facebook Study Group

News

Student Faces Expulsion over Facebook Study Group

3/19/2008

A chemical engineering student in Toronto faces expulsion from his school for running an online study group through Facebook. Chris Avenir, a first-year student at Ryerson University in Toronto, Ontario, said he joined the social networking group in fall 2007 to get help with the homework in one of his chemistry classes. Eventually, he became the administrator for the network, which grew to include 146 students.

The homework questions counted for 10 percent of the grade in the class. When an administrator discovered the group and informed the professor, Avenir received an F and was charged with academic misconduct, punishable by expulsion. An appeal filed last week was to be settled this week by the campus.

According to the Ryerson school newspaper, The EyeOpener, Avenir was singled out even though he said he never posted any answers on the discussion pages. He is quoted as saying, "What we did wasn't any different than tutoring, than tri-mentoring, than having a library study group."

The school has proposed changes to the campus senate to extend its non-academic student code of conduct to incidents that happen online. It would also create a "Student Conduct Officer" to enforce the code.

The case has received international blog and media coverage. On campus, some students and staff have organized to protest the suggested change to the policy. Others said they believe that Avenir deserves punishment for organizing a group in which students exchange notes and answers. A follow-up article in The EyeOpener quoted the president of Ryerson's Engineering Students' Society, Griffith d'Souza, as saying, "It seems unfair to everyone who would have worked on that assignment on their own."



Dian Schaffhauser is a writer who covers technology and business. Send your higher education technology news to her at dian@dischaffhauser.com.

Cite this Site

Dian Schaffhauser, "Student Faces Expulsion over Facebook Study Group," Campus Technology, 3/19/2008, http://www.campustechnology.com/article.aspx?aid=59936

copy text (above) for proper citation



Recommended Reading
  • Digital Arts Alliance Adds Fordham U

    The Digital Arts Alliance, a consortium led by the Pearson Foundation that promotes digital arts in K-12 education, is expanding its membership with the addition of Fordham University. This follows on the heels of three other organizations joining the group back in July--the National Education Association (NEA) Foundation, the Foundation for Investor Education, and Employers For Education Excellence (E3).

  • Payment Card Security Toughens with DSS 1.2 Release

    Opinions are mixed on what the new Payment Card Industry (PCI) DSS 1.2 standard will mean for security pros going forward. However, the mandate is clear: protect data.

  • 6 Universities Join NASA Astrobiology Institute

    Research teams from six universities have been selected by NASA to become members of its Astrobiology Institute with the aim of exploring the "origins, evolution, distribution, and future of life in the universe." Teams were each awarded five-year grants, averaging $7 million each, according to NASA.

  • Amazon To Host Microsoft Solutions in the Cloud

    Amazon announced Wednesday that it is conducting a private beta test of Microsoft's server products running on Amazon's hosted computing platform, which is called Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2). Amazon expects to offer companies the ability to run their applications on EC2 using Microsoft Windows Server or Microsoft SQL Server sometime in the fall, according to an announcement issued by the company.

  • CRM Pushing into New Areas of Higher Ed

    Implementing a customer relationship management (CRM) solution can require "difficult or even painful behavioral challenges" for administrators in higher education, according to Nicole Engelbert, a lead analyst with research and analysis firm Datamonitor. "It means re-orienting yourself to your students. That can be tough, so you need to be ready for that."

  • Integrated Collaborative Environment Leverages Web 2.0

    Here's a bit of trivia for your next high-tech happy hour: A "nog" (in addition to being a Christmas favorite) is a wooden block built into a masonry wall so that joinery structure can be nailed to it. For the founders of Piscataway, N.J.-based startup Bluenog this obscure bit of carpentry nomenclature was the perfect metaphor for an integrated software suite that includes a content management system (CMS), rich portal features and business intelligence (BI) capabilities.