
Artificial Intelligence
Turnitin charged colleges vastly different amounts to detect plagarism
Purchasing records show some colleges are paying three times more than others.
Challenging technology to serve the public good.
Denise Zapata is a Deputy Editor at CalMatters and The Markup, leading our coverage of K-12 schools and higher education. She is a veteran journalist who has spent most of her career covering California’s education issues, first as a reporter and then as an editor for several teams that included at least one education reporter. Before joining CalMatters, she was senior editor at EdSource. Prior to that, as associate editor for The Center for Investigative Reporting, Denise was part of one team that won a George Polk Award and another that was a Pulitzer Prize finalist. She began her journalism career at The Bakersfield Californian, where she reported on several topics, including higher education. She later became an assistant city editor, then city editor at the paper. After that she became an assistant metro editor at the San Diego Union-Tribune, overseeing regional teams in north, east and south San Diego County. Denise is a Bay Area native and a graduate of Santa Clara University.
Artificial Intelligence
Purchasing records show some colleges are paying three times more than others.
Artificial Intelligence
Colleges and universities renew Turnitin subscriptions year after year even though its flawed detectors are expensive and require students to let the company keep their papers forever.