Is this a good story to use in an interview?

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MercuryBlade

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My freshman year I was falsely accused of academic dishonesty.

Long story short, it was sometime during first semester. I had a paper due the next day on a short story we read (the paper was assigned about a week ago, it was something like 2-3 pages, nothing huge). I ended up churning the thing out late at night, I was really tired.
Cut to later in the week, my professor says that he wants to see me after class regarding the last paper I turned in. This is about halfway into the semester, and I've handed in quite a few papers. At this point I'm assuming he's going to give me a hard time about handing in a paper that is pretty sub par.
The professor tells me that there is no way I didn't plagiarize this paper. He says he ran it through this database they have, and couldn't find any proof that I copied and pasted anything, but the language ideas I used were much too advanced for a freshman. He said he can't fail me because he lacks concrete proof but he *knows* I cheated. The thing is, this short story we read was super obscure story, he found one scholarly article on it, but he even told me that it apparent this wasn't a source for my paper.
He hounded me repeatedly, I even made an appointment with him later to explain to him that I've never had anything like this happen to me in my life, I've never cheated on anything etc. I eventually left it alone, and decided that there was nothing I could do to change his opinion, and that there was no reason why I had to let this unfounded and unfair accusation affect my performance.

I thought this might be a good anecdote to tell when the question "when were you unfairly judged or criticized" comes up in interviews...
 
IF it comes up, then yes, could be a good story (I say "IF" because that seems like a somewhat atypical question for interviews - maybe for secondaries...). Maybe add something about what you learned and a better description of how you handled the situation aside from "I just gave up." SUCKS when profs get an idea in their heads and can't shake it. Sorry, friend!
 
if it comes up, then yes, could be a good story (i say "if" because that seems like a somewhat atypical question for interviews - maybe for secondaries...). Maybe add something about what you learned and a better description of how you handled the situation aside from "i just gave up." sucks when profs get an idea in their heads and can't shake it. Sorry, friend!
+1
 
Why even take the chance? After the interview, say your story was very memorable, the interviewer might remember you as the "plagiarizer" or could come away with a negative connotation. Talk only about the good stuff if you.
 
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