College student refuses to let an entitled teammate cheat off his work on a group project after she ghosts them for 4 months: ‘[She] said I 'owe' her credit'

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  • Students working on a group project together.
  • AITA for removing my classmate's name from our final project after she vanished for a month?
  • I'm in a university course where our grade basically hinges on a final group capstone and a morning defense. Our group was three people: me, "Tara," and "Jon." At the start we split tasks in a shared Google doc,
  • University students gathering around the calendar to schedule dates to meet for their group project.
  • made a simple timeline, and agreed to do quick check ins twice a week. Tara was normal for the first couple weeks, leaving comments and adding a few links, then she just went silent. Like fully gone. No replies
  • in the doc, no replies to texts, nothing. Jon and I kept going because the professor is strict and this project is a huge chunk of the grade, and we couldn't risk tanking it because someone decided to ghost. After about
  • two weeks of nothing we rewrote the section that was assigned to Tara because it was still an outline with half sentences. We built the slides, fixed citations, ran through the presentation, and the document history for the last month is
  • basically just my name and Jon's name doing all the edits. The only "Tara" activity is older, and a bunch of tasks still show her name next to them like little reminders of what never got
  • done. I was stressed and honestly kind of hurt because Tara and I have been friends since freshman year, so it didn't feel like a random teammate issue, it felt personal.
  • Then yesterday, one hour before the deadline, Tara texts me: "hey sorry been busy. send me what you have and I'll toss in somethng. also keep my name on it, obviously." I told her the
  • project was finished and we already covered everything. She replied "you're obligated, we're a team" and then "don't be weird about it, you owe me." She asked for the slide deck so she could "add her touch" and said
  • she'd show up for the defense anyway. I said no because it was literally minutes before upload and we had a defense at 9am. I also asked where she'd been, and she just said "stuff" and got mad that I was "interrogating"
  • her instead of helping her last minute. So I submitted the final files with only my and Jon's names, and I emailed the TA a short heads up that Tara had been absent for most of the work and we didn't want to
  • misrepresent contributions, and that the edit history shows it. This morning before the defense, Tara walked in, saw the printed title slide, and went ice cold. She hissed that I humiliated her on purpose, that
  • friends don't do this, that she was "going through it" and I should've covered for her without questions. She said I ruined her grade and she's going to report me for "sabotage." I didn't yell back,
  • College student presenting his project to the professor for a final grade.
  • but I told her disappearing for a month and returning with demands isn't friendship either. Jon is backing me up, but a couple classmates said I should've left her name on it to
  • avoid drama and dealt with it after. Now I'm sitting here waiting to go in, feeling sick like I crossed a line even though the paper trail is real. AITA for taking her name off?
  • Junior-Equipment-8... NTA, she was banking on your "friendship" to do all the work and let her take the credit. She knew what she was doing.
  • tinypaperking OP. That's what stings. If she'd said she was overwhelmed or asked for a smaller task, I would've worked with her. Instead she disappeared, left us rewriting her section, then showed up right before the deadline asking for the deck and saying I "owe" her credit. The edit log is basically me and Jon for weeks, so putting her name on felt like lying to the TA.
  • Plastic-Ad-5171 Nope. As a former academic judicial officer, keeping her name on the project would be tantamount to helping her cheat. If she was having problems, it was on her to communicate to the team, the professor and TA to work out
  • an alternate arrangement to complete the work. That she didn't do any of those things means she wasn't interested in doing the required course work and thought she could cheat her way into a better grade. NTA, and I hope she grows up.
  • tsidaysi Just be honest. You can never go wrong being honest. I am an accounting professor and every accountant will tell you we get stuck doing most of the work on group projects especially in capstone classes where you don't pass you don't graduate. She can work it out with Prof.

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