Said friend also says said adviser plagiarized some of his materials for a paper... and got it published. Admin doesn’t believe the complaint. He left the program in question quietly, because he fears making a ruckus would damage admission chances at other programs.
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Prikaži ovu nit
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Were you in his shoes, would you seek redress? If so, how?
Prikaži ovu nit
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Any emails or correspondence to demonstrate that he had prepared the application before her? Especially with attachments that were then plagiarized from?
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Says he has 30 pages of documentation
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this is extra bizarre to me because in my field the kind of grants grad students apply for are wildly different from those profs apply for but I guess it's different in anthro
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Really? Our boss had us all work on high-dollar grants for the lab. Trickle-down economics, and all that.
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Perhaps write a proposal where the initial letters spell out: "This was actually written by (Name Here) but is being stolen and submitted by Evil Advisor, as bloody usual"?
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Then (in this elaborate academic revenge fantasy) after submission but before publication, reveal everything to the Evil Advisor, and say you will not point the scheme out to the authorities if they help establish the original authorship of the previously stolen work.
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I'm getting the idea that people should hire a notary, or copyright these before submitting them.
Hvala. Twitter će to iskoristiti za poboljšanje vaše vremenske crte. PoništiPoništi
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Hvala. Twitter će to iskoristiti za poboljšanje vaše vremenske crte. PoništiPoništi
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