Prose makes prizes
Oxbridge Essays is the world’s first vendor of luxury and custom-made essays written exclusively by members of Oxford and Cambridge universities. Our company employs members of Oxford and Cambridge universities to write model academic essays and dissertations for students from other universities and schools. Our service has recently provoked some controversy regarding cheating and plagiarism in both national and regional press. On this we make our position unmistakably clear.
We abhor both practices alike. And we regard claims to the contrary as non-sense: as alarmist noises made by those who have not read our literature. As is said explicitly in numerous places on our web-site, the academic research we supply is to be used solely as ‘model’ research on which clients must base their own work. We own the copyright to our essays, and for a customer to hand in our work as their own is a breach of our copyright - a breach we reserve the right to prosecute.
By such warnings we seek to deter clients from cheating or plagiarising. Our enterprise is entirely transparent. We are registered at Companies House, pay tax, have a fixed landline and a trading address. Our practices are wholly legal and do not even intrude into any grey areas of the law. Other controversy has met our employment of Oxbridge students, chiefly the claim that such employment may distract students from their own study.
In reply we say this: firstly, 40- 45% of our writers are alumni of Oxford or Cambridge and so have no academic work that might be jeopardised by working for us. Secondly, the university does not forbid current students from working during the 32 weeks of vacation. Thirdly, even during term time, the spirit of the university ban on student employment is surely intended to stop students from entering fulltime employment, and not the occasional work that our writers undertake.
Oxbridge students are permitted to write for newspapers and other such organizations, they may work as tutors to other pupils, and we see no basic difference between this first kind of work and our own. Finally, we know that whilst some students may be so assiduous and dedicated as to study seven days a week, we know also that a very many others have one, two or several free days per week that are spent not in vital learning but in the pub, in sports, in leisure and so on.
For these students we offer the choice to swap some of their leisure time for serious cash. For many other students for whom life in Oxford and Cambridge is a struggle, our service provides the extra money they need for their study at a time-cost of far fewer hours than would be needed to make the same amount in a bar. We hope that Oxford and Cambridge will applaud any initiative that gives their students both financial security and extra hours in which to study.
Our company offers a wonderful opportunity for cash-strapped Oxbridge students with extra time on their hands to use their academic gifts to improve the learning of others and to better their own financial position.
20th Apr 2006