One of the things I did for money when I was a graduate student is teach the University of Arizona’s LSAT and GRE preparation courses. The lecture materials contained the following advice, which I was expected to pass on to the students: “Do not look at your neighbor’s test booklet during the exam. He or she could be working another section.” I found this appalling. What it should have said is, “Do not look at your neighbor’s test booklet during the exam. It’s wrong.” What message was being conveyed to prospective lawyers and professors by citing self-interest but not morality? Was it simply assumed that moral considerations would have no weight in the students’ deliberations?