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Exam body to review plagiarism prevention

Focus on cheating comes as lawmaker slams school head's response to revelations

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Chief principal Kason Chan is accused of implying that plagiarism is widespread.

The city's examination body will discuss with teachers a spate of plagiarism cases that saw 23 pupils taught by the same teacher at the same private school disqualified from the Diploma of Secondary Education examination this year, authorities say.

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The incident will be a case study in an annual review of the exams, in which the Examinations and Assessment Authority plans to advise teachers on how to prevent similar cases in future.

The review would likely be held after the new academic term began in September, a spokesman for the authority said.

On Sunday, the authority revealed it had invalidated the Chinese-language exam papers of the 23 pupils after it found their school projects, which counted towards grades, included plagiarised passages from the internet.

The pupils studied at the same branch of the private Modern College but were not in the same class. Without a score for the subject, they are effectively barred this year from entering a local university.

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After the official revelation, Modern College said it had suspended the teacher, whose identity it refused to provide.

"That teacher was too honest" in passing on the pupils' work in its original form to the authority, college chief principal Kason Chan Kay-sang said.

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