Tue Aug 14, 2007 12:00PM EDT
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So many technologies, so many ways to use them to cheat. There have been widespread reports of kids taking cell phone photos of their exams and sending them to other students via SMS messaging. Other stories cite students using PDAs to keep their notes by their sides during a test, and online paper mills where you can buy a ready-to-turn-in paper on just about anything. Some kids are purportedly so good at text messaging that they can dole out test answers without taking their phone out of their pocket.
As students get more wily about high tech cheating schools are trying to keep one step ahead.
The best known category of anti-cheat devices can help spot a plagiarized paper. There are a number of anti-plagiarism detectors on the market—the most popular being Turnitin—but they all work in a similar fashion. These store huge databases of student papers that have been acquired from numerous sources and compare the paper that's been turned in against the database. Recently Educause ran a comparative review of seven of the most popular anti-plagiarism tools.
But that's just the tip of the creative ways schools are trying to thwart cheating. The New York Times recently covered the cheating on campus story and reported numerous examples of counterattack. "At the Anderson School of Management at U.C.L.A., the building's wireless Internet hotspot is turned off during finals to thwart Internet access." One teacher had his students turn the computers to face toward him so that he could see their screens during an exam. "At Mercer County Community College in West Windsor, NJ, students must clear their calculators' memory and sometimes turn in their cell phones before tests. At Brigham Young University, exams are given in a testing center, where electronic devices are generally banned. In some classes at Butler University in Indianapolis, professors use software that allows them to observe the programs running on computers students are taking tests on." And, according to the article, some institutions even install cameras in rooms where tests are administered.
Lest you think that America is the only cheating culture, check this one out. Even the police get involved: Chinese police detained three people for running a high tech cheating scam involving wireless microphones during the national college entrance exam.
The real question, of course, is why students cheat, and sometimes the best answers come directly from the students. In a CNN interview one student asked to comment on the use of iPods as cheating devices answered, "You can just thread the earbud up your sleeve and then hold it to your ear like you're resting your head on your hand." But that, she offered, doesn't mean you should be banned from using iPods. "People who are going to cheat are still going to cheat, with or without them."
Finally, where there are kids and cheating there's bound to be an academic study. Some of the best work is being done at The Center for Academic Integrity. Who knows, you may be able to get a Ph.D. in high tech cheating someday.
In the interest of proper attribution (a more genteel form of plagiarism), this photo comes from Textually.org.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
I was a TA at the country's largest university, and we had classes of 400+ undergraduate students. With a few simple rules (no hats, sit up straight) and proper monitoring (4 TA's and the professor pacing the auditorium), no one dared to cheat. Okay, one girl tried but she was caught and took an F in the class. The professor's class is known across campus as the one that it's impossible to cheat in. Too many profs get lazy and don't monitor test sessions.
Seperation of govt + schools = 99%+ graduation rate.
Here’s what I think is so ridiculous about cheating almost all the classes I took in collage the teachers gave you the answers if you came to class and took notes. On the subject of those stupid programs to catch cheaters I hate those I have never bought or used a paper that was not my own. On one paper I wrote I got it returned to me and told I was cheating in one class. It was terrible I had to prove my innocence it is just a good thing that I cited all my work and the books were still in the library. I had to bring the books to the teacher and show here where I got the material, no such thing as innocent till proven guilty in academia. They need to use their aids to check the work before accusing a person of cheating.
ppl are gunna cheat one way or another. were gunna find other ways 2 cheat.
Everybody Cheats. Those who deny...are the biggest cheaters! Its normal and its part of life.
i used to cheat,,,, unti i got caught with my answers on the inside of my water bottle wrapper
Localized EMP charges in each classroom - done
Here's a thought... When during your job are you going to have to do things on your own, on paper without any help from anyone or anything? Written tests DO NOT measure your knowledge on a subjet and DO NOT help you learn, or help you prepare for the future. Tests measure memory. Instead of fighting cheating... why don't schools find a way to actually measure how much students know AND help students prepare for the future? Use real life examples, make students find creative ways to solving a problem, teach them how to work in teams, to be efficient. Sure it's a real challange to find ways to actually TEACH students, but that's whay schools are supposed to do. I don't see how asking some questions and making students stress out for exams helps. I have had perfect grades and many tests in the past... ask me anything from those tests and I bearly remember anything. Ask me about programing or other stuff I has to read and put into practice with examples of real life and I remember perfectly. Cheating is not the problem...
cheating on tests is going to happen no matter what the school try and do
It takes some smatrs to know how to use things like phones to cheat. If people put the effort into studing rather then finding ways to cheat they wouldn't have to cheat. However- i used to program my calcultor to cheat. I would program it to do all the equations for me or use it to hold my equation notes (good ol' T-86). So this isn't anything new. People will always find a way to cheat and as they get better at it schools need to get better at finding and stoping it.
why use technology when all the old fashioned stuff still works just fine?
"what goes around comes around" watch out someday somebody is going to cheat you, happy trails
I don't cheat.. pointless..it's just shows that your the one who is getting cheated in the long run.. Juss fail the darn test and get a F. That is what I do, then I ----- with school officials saying "Atleast I tried something.. whether I study and got a good grade or study and still didn't fail.. ONE THING I DIDNT DO IS CHEAT!" lol
What do you get out of cheating? Actually pay attention, do your homework and study. What a concept in school huh. Only losers and slackers cheat
It amazes me how many respondents can not even spell, much less use decent grammar - 'geniuses' and 'cheaters' alike. It worries me that so many people have no problem with cheating. It you think it is fine to cheat in high school and in college, then I'm going to have to worry about you cheating on your job. Maybe you'll take credit for something you didn't do. Maybe you'll screw up because you couldn't be bothered to study. College and university isn't just about preparing you for the real world. That piece of paper means that you stuck to something long enough to earn a degree. It isn't just about what you know, it's about the work you put in to get it. It's about learning an ethics and a moral code.
God cheats those who cheat themselves!!!
Since we have started coddling kids and not made much expectations out of them, how can the colleges and Liberal Colleges expect them to do well? Cheating only hurts the ones who cheat. They will amount to nothing when it comes time for real world events and there is no such thing as cheating. You get more satisfaction from getting the grade you earned rather then the grade you got by cheating.
To "loydjerry"- there's a difference in "being connected" and getting credit for something you didn't do or deserve to receive. Knowing the ease at which students are able to cheat invalidates the results of work done and lessens the worth/significance of a degree. Good work ethics and being proud of accomplishments through hard work shouldn't be some archaic and obsolete thought. Do the work and take what grade you earned!
i wish you good luck cheaters..hope you won't get caught..learn your lessons anyway!
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66 Posted by diamoundback2003 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:42PM EDT Report Abuse
Why would you cheat?? One thing to cheat but what do you learn. How would you learn if you have it handed down to you by cheating.