Is Tech Making Cheating Easy?

Mon Jul 31, 2006 8:25PM EDT

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With so much new technology emerging every day, it was only a matter of time before schools began to accept it into their classrooms. After all, technology is a big part of a student's life. When I was in high school, it was fairly uncommon to see students with cell phones or laptops on school grounds—even though these tools were readily available. Today, most kids in school have a cell phone, and the situation has gotten so out of control that schools are already moving towards banning them in the classroom. Besides being disruptive, cell phones and other technology are also being used to [gasp!] cheat .

Cheating is common among students—that's no big secret; but when you hear about kids paying thousands of dollars to pass a test, well that's when you know students are seriously under pressure. Desperate students in Vietnam, paid over $3,000 for an elaborate setup consisting of wigs and shirts wired to mobile phones that would allow them to cheat on their college entrance exams. According to ABC News, police also confiscated mobile phones, earphones, and SIM cards that were used to call in test questions and answers.

It's no surprise to hear that this is a global epidemic, and that students are finding new ways to cheat via text messaging, cameraphones, email, PDAs, iPods, and Bluetooth technology. But none of these are quite as ripe with cheating possibility as the Internet. If you head on over to Superiorpapers.com. or Masterpapers.com, you'll find a whole team of people at your disposal who are more than willing to write thesis papers or even doctoral dissertations for a few dollars. The sites operate like any other business offering customer support, money back guarantees, and a toll-free number.

So why are students going to such technological extremes to make the grade? A USA Today's article "Study examines why students cheat" may gives us some insight as to why all the cheating. After one college professor discovered that 47 of his 64 students had cheated on a take-home exam, he and another professor decided to survey the cheating students, and found that, while they knew cheating was wrong, they rationalized their behavior by putting the blame on the system, the environment, the context, and even the professor. Some of them said "they were simply taking advantage of technological opportunities." Many students also try to justify their cheating saying they are too busy juggling jobs, extracurricular activities, and want high GPAs or time to spend with friends and family.

But just like students, teachers also have the power of the Internet at their disposal. Teachers can find sites like Turnitin.com, where they can check the originality of their student's work. Submitted papers are compared against more than 15 million papers on a database, as well as other sources on the Internet. But the biggest problem may be a teacher's ignorance of high-tech cheating. At one high school, out of 19 teachers polled, "only two were aware that students use text-messaging to cheat." Most teachers didn't grow up with this technology, so it's no shock that they don't really understand how it works.

So my question is to the teachers out there: what is the most outrageous form of cheating you've encountered? And what can teachers and parents do to prevent high-tech cheating?

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  • 66 Posted by deathscythe115 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:39PM EDT Report Abuse

    this question is a "no brainer", the answer is of course. The better the tech is, the much easier for cheating. I remember in the old days where we cheated on tests, we hide books, notes, everything imaginable that could help us cheat in drawers, white-out caps, throwing little notes across the room etc. But now with laptops, cellphones, just on click and your done. There's NO way of stopping students in cheating because like everyone says, they'll always find new ways. But there's one and only one way to stop cheating and that is when they realize they don't know anything at all in their lives, then they will know that they've cheated themselves and they will stop cheating.....at least some of them.

  • 67 Posted by terrylmac on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:01PM EDT Report Abuse

    Instead of putting so much effor into figuring out ways to prevent students from cheating, more effort should be put into teaching students that cheating is wrong. They should be taught that an average grade earned is worth a lot more than a good grade gotten by cheating. This is the responsiblity of the parents and needs to be learned at home.

  • 68 Posted by risingregalus on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:42PM EDT Report Abuse

    Not only in the classroom but marriages go under because of high tech. It is much easier to cheat on a spouse now. Email, cell phones, cell phones with phoney names and the list goes on. Ironically, that is how all the cheaters get caught. Cell phones and email. I talked to a PI one day and he said, people can buy phones all day long with phoney names and businesees. So, the classroom is not the only place being invaded by high tech. A positive note. In college, somehow the cheaters learned some information by cheating. I found out at a university. One problem, they never learn how to teach themselves how to learn, which is crucial in today's world. Learn to Teach yourself because 8 times out 10 the management does not have the time to teach you or to give adequate training. It works both ways with High tech. Who learns the tricks the fastest. Who is deluding who. I vote to remove cell phones from many places myself. I think they are annoying and have noticed that people who take them everywhere have higher stress. No bounderies.

  • 69 Posted by lcs150 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:58PM EDT Report Abuse

    You also have to define "cheating." If you don't want people to be able to look up information or work together during an exam, simply don't make it a take-home exam. However, if you give a take-home exam, you should accept that students will work together and/or look up information, be it in books, notes, or on the internet. Which is worse, using an internet resource or the 1959 World Book sitting on their living room shelf? Which has more accurate information? World population:

  • 70 Posted by wf_quicksilver@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:44PM EDT Report Abuse

    its an epidemic, omg! JK. cheating occurs on all levels of society, get over it. There are other ways of dealing with things other than just banning everything.

  • 71 Posted by fortaximan on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:01PM EDT Report Abuse

    How about we start cutting off fingers when students are caught cheating?

  • 72 Posted by mattcliff03 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:11PM EDT Report Abuse

    Man, if a teacher can't catch a kid that cheats over and over in order to pass her class, she shouldn't be teaching. Kids are going to cheat no matter what the punishment. I cheated all through highschool and the only thing it does is get you out of highschool. When i got to my community college i was royally screwed.

  • 73 Posted by schoolnursern1 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:08PM EDT Report Abuse

    I totally agree! We have a problem with cell phones used for cheating, disrupting class, false emergency calls, etc. You name it, children will use technology for it. With such a vast array of technolgy used for cheating, schools are cracking down on students. I think technology is great and has worked to our advantage, but again, with every edge of technology and tools we give kids, there will always be those who use good for evil.

  • 74 Posted by a98jeep on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:43PM EDT Report Abuse

    Eventually, the schools will need to install signal jammers like the ones in use in hospitals. A simple, but expensive fix.

  • 75 Posted by rmartin1978 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:44PM EDT Report Abuse

    I was a Graduate Assistant for a Professor at the University of South Florida. An undergraduate student in a Political Science class turned in a 15 page paper. After grading several papers, I knew what to expect as far as quality on the majority of the papers. This one stood out because of its complexity of thought, massive amount of uncited data and for the most part coherent thought. Out of curiosity, I took a few words from a sentence and typed it into Google. Voila! A perfect match. After a little exploration, I found that the student had literally cut and pasted all but 6 words of the entire paper. 6 WORDS of an entire 15 page paper! I highlighted each section of the paper that was plagarized and returned it to the student with the exact hyperlinks it was lifted from.

  • 76 Posted by healingpath on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:17PM EDT Report Abuse

    So Alex, eh, I mean "helli3yte" what makes you think your prof wouldn't just click youi ID and see your picture on your profile to scope you? Too bad I can't post it here. BTW, don't come to work for my company because, Sgt. Schultz, YOU KNOW NOTHING!

  • 77 Posted by aye_shawty on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:00PM EDT Report Abuse

    Banning cell phones will only give students more initiative to find better ways to cheat. But at my old high school the cell phone was the easiest way to cheat. There were secret codes, secret methods, basically just about anything. Teachers shouldn't focus directly on cell phones and gadgets when it comes down to it, kids are way more creative.

  • 78 Posted by mmeier1016 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:23PM EDT Report Abuse

    My mom is a teacher and there is a major problem with parents actually doing any kind of parenting. I help my mom out here and there tutoring kids in her classroom that could use some extra help. An essay topic one day was 'tell me something about a parental figure in your life" A girl in 5th grade wrote "My mom is a barbie. We went shopping in Las Vegas for the perfect bag." That was all that was in the essay nothing else. Parents need to realize that while its the teacher's responsibility while the student is in the classroom it is also even more of the parents responsibility to be a parent and not a friend. Parents anymore are not taking the time out to check work at a young age in anyway. Once this doesnt happen it's very much downhill from there. I have just finished college and finished it on my own merits because my parents, were always in my face about getting work done but also in learning how to research work.

  • 79 Posted by frizzylau on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:03PM EDT Report Abuse

    good teachers can make papers/tests/assignments cheat proof. If the assignment is interesting and unique the students want to do it. Cheating is often the fault of rote teaching methods. Secondarily, one way to know if your student is not writing their own papers is to do extensive in class writing so that you know they wrote it and you know what they are actually capable. The source of cheating is the focus on grades over actual learning experiences. Cheating just goes to show that our academic system still cares more about the product and the process (and it explains why you meet so many upper level college students who have so little knowledge, their major academic abilities go into how to cheat...)

  • 81 Posted by skrat219 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:26PM EDT Report Abuse

    "These "cheaters" are learning skills that will actually help them get hired. Would you hire someone who didn't know how to find the answers to questions? " Somebody actually wrote this? Would I hire someone b/c they know how to text message, but are dumb as a rock? TAre you serious. Those of us lucky enough to go to school should actually try to learn something. This is the kind of reply I would expect from a spoiled, X Games-loving teenager these days. It is sad. What a joke? I know how to use Google so I don't have to learn how to think. Does anybody realize how dangerous that is?

  • 82 Posted by magnolia7026 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:03PM EDT Report Abuse

    I had a student cut & paste directly from a website, including the copyright date and source at the bottom of the page. I guess I have to give credit for that part.

  • 83 Posted by househubby92 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:21PM EDT Report Abuse

    When I start teaching next year, I am going to have a blast collecting tech items from my students when I discover them being used in class. Can't wait to see the looks on their parents' faces when they have to come to school during school hours to claim the devices. I am betting this little incentive will get parents to educate their children on the proper conduct in school.

  • 84 Posted by wutsupwidit33 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:51PM EDT Report Abuse

    My honors bio teacher found a way to prevent people from cheating..used the computers them self..all the tests/exams would all be random questions but all the same material..and he had control of everyones computer so if they went on the internet hed know..and txting would have to be basically the whole question so eventually they would get caught because he walks around..i mean the whole look over at another persons computer..would rarely work because they could be ahead of u and not have even the same questions..so its hard tocheat on those

  • 85 Posted by jason_2@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:29PM EDT Report Abuse

    Winning is everything and that includes cheating.........so my advised please get those A's

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