“Hate summer homework, kids? We’ll do it for you!” A disturbingly booming business in Japan ~hehe i thought ONLY US American's ...cheat Oops !
Sure, the above isn’t an exemplary approach to avoiding bad grades, but recently an even more dubious method has been getting a lot of attention: online businesses have been offering to do your child’s homework and school projects for a fee! While the homework-by-proxy racket is nothing new, recent media coverage of the growing enterprise has brought to light this questionable practice and its appalling popularity among elementary and junior high school students.
What does this teach, and not teach, future adults? Why are parents taking advantage of these services for their young children? One twisted reason will probably surprise you.
▼ An example of a homework-by-proxy website, called TSK Service. They tackle anything from art projects to college term papers!
A reporter, whose son just couldn’t do his book report or watercolor assignment, decided to look into these services for the sake of journalism (though the boy certainly lucked out there!) and was stunned by what he unearthed. It turns out that many companies provide work that matches your child’s age as well as mimic youngsters’ handwriting. He could also request a specific level of achievement, as in competition-worthy essays or artworks. Most surprising was the fact that the first three websites he contacted had to turn him down because they were overloaded with work orders. Understandably, the end of summer and winter breaks are peak seasons for these establishments.
The sixth company he emailed finally accepted, and because his was an urgent request he had to pay extra: 10,000 yen ($94.89) for a five-page book report and 8,000 yen ($75.91) for the summer-themed watercolor. He was told that payment was required only after receiving the finished work, which abated his worries about being scammed. Sure enough, three days later he a book report on a classic short story and a rather impressive painting (for a seventh grader) of a field of sunflowers arrived in the mail.
Now another worry arose: what would happen if the teacher decided to enter the painting in an art competition?
1. “Homework has a point because you work hard on it yourself!”
2. “Work you don’t want to do is a part of life! If you’d rather play, then at least deal with the consequences.”
3.“Do you get that you’re lying? People these days don’t realize how their actions affect others around them.”
4. “We’re teaching grade-schoolers that money solves everything?!”
5. The flip-side
While no specific percentages are given, further research revealed that although some parents admit to relying on these services because they don’t want to look over their kids’ homework, quite a few pay professionals so that their kids can focus on studying for elite junior high and high school entrance exams, without being bogged down by inane projects. Perhaps to these parents, this is the same as paying for tutors and heaps of study guides in order to get ahead. And if their kids can manage cram school and pass important tests, they must have acquired enough life skills without all that homework, right?
In the same vein, devil’s advocates argued, “If the point of homework is to turn it in, what’s the difference?” Some flippantly said that the kids are learning street smarts and problem-solving skills, as well as the merits of delegating duties. “It’s ethically wrong but if a high school kid uses his own money to get by without any adults catching on, then that’s a life skill right there.”
For example, one website called ShukudaiHelp3 proudly thanked its “supporters” for a busy 2014 summer season. They went on to say that since their inception 10 years ago, they have been providing solutions to people’s lives, and implied that they are only providing information that any student would be glad to have access to. When asked their opinion on what they do, they stated that while it’s not good to avoid all of life’s challenges, it’s not wrong to rely on proxy services in times of emergency and to lead an “efficient” student life.
Unfortunately, that website was started by a group of high schoolers who wanted to contribute to society despite their non-adult status; somewhere along the line it seems like their good intentions became distorted, only to reemerge as self-contradiction. Still, some are inclined to think that homework-by-proxy services will have no measurable effect on society in the long run. For families with money, will these businesses become an indispensable part of childhood one day, as natural as asking a grown-up for help or (try not to do this, kids!) copying a friend’s answers? And would you feel slightly cheated if you found out that I hired a professional writer for this piece? Just kidding.
Sources: Yahoo! Japan, News-yasan, Shukudai9, UK Essays, ShukudaiHelp3, Sakubun Daikou Service
Feature image: Chibi Maruko-chan via YouTube
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