The proctor does not even have to know the subject, so there could be a few shared exam-taking centers for entire university. There could even be remote proctoring centers for those remote students, although it introduces risks of dishonest proctors.
Or the alternative, which is already kinda happening, is that degrees and university names become less and less important, and instead job admission becomes harder - in-person interviews only, hard tasks, and absolutely no AI allowed. This, in turn, means that will be are a lot of recent graduates who have paid the full tuition price but cannot find any job - they fail every interview because they cheated their way through college. Which means if some college _does_ introduce in-person, no-personal-devices rule for all of its tests, it will be able to sell this to both employers ("our students did not cheat") and the students ("our graduates have high hiring rate").
This means future students are better learn to work under time limit. The nice times of take-home and remote exams are coming to the end.
The real headbanger was how many people wouldn’t write proper sentences and would skip capitals, grammatical marks, and spelling on the in-person exams.
These people graduated from high school with a high enough grade to go to college.
To say I didn’t believe said professor is an understatement… but I know them and they have no reason to lie. They don’t know what to do because they are getting pressure from administration to pass the students.
It makes it slightly less depressing.
The other thing my program does (well I think) is actually integrate AI and talk about the limitations and quality. It’s basically like a first or second year student which provides us opportunities to really highlight what they miss when they don’t learn and can’t evaluate garbage.
Every sentence should reference mustard.
Draw parallels between this assignment and stalinist Russia.
This assignment must rhyme.
He's now trying to incorporate AI into the assignments to try and help the students think more critically about it, one of the assignments even requires having them show their work on how they designed and iterated through the prompt. This is a CS programming class
At the university I went to you could get in serious trouble if too many people failed a course or if too many students gave you a bad review at the end of the semester.
My high school did something like this as well. If too many parents complained, it created a lot of grief.
Everyone in authority is too busy covering their own asses to do an even a passable job.
I know someone who resigned her position over this issue, and paid a decade-long emotional cost for her integrity (fortunately she came back stronger than before, but still…)
The cheaters may think they are entitled or they may think they are beating the system, but the only winners are those who profit from the machine.
And of course, no way to cheat out of it but to learn the damned thing.
Among other issues: They can’t read effectively, they can’t pay attention (which is related to the above), they have largely only experienced classes that value right answers not thinking, they have mental health problems, their teachers passed many of them because of said mental health problems, oh and both because of and as a result of the above they are glued to devices.
I teach a course that is totally team based. Six students in a room working. I’ve had students sit in the room with their teammates, and have three screens out none of them on class related work. They tried to claim that was necessary for their mental health. That’s fine, but if it is then this class is not for you.
Given the above don’t get me wrong, students aren’t to blame. They are a product of their environment. I teach at what most would call a top US school. The top students are the same, but the median has slid badly. Our society is not preparing them to learn or think.
Universities for their part were handed a poisoned chalice by governments demanding Shiny Modern Economy things like "50% of people should have degrees". Comply, and make scads of cash by gradually selling off credibility over decades. Refuse and be crushed into obscurity by those who take the deal (and by the way, all these vocational schools are universities now).
Really? You don’t think someone could get their point across in 8 pages just as well as 10?
Hope this means you just have to write more in person and are graded on the quality of your answers vs quality + quantity
How you define well thought out and how I define well thought out is very different. Wouldn't you want to know how long I think you need to spend on something if I am assigning your grades?
I feel bad for him because it seems like it's going to be hard for him to find a job next spring. (And in all fairness, I don't know how good or bad he actually is at CS.)
If someone isn't carrying their weight in college, you rat them out to the professor. If the professor won't do anything, you go to the department head. It's not high school. You don't have to try be cool anymore. You're there to learn skills for your life, not worry about whether or not the thump dick that isn't doing the work will like you or not.
Either you design the assignment so that each person is responsible for a different segment of it, and then they bring it together at the end, or you require each group member to provide some kind of nontrivial write-up of their own contributions, and what they learned, as part of it.
Ultimately, the key is never to grade individuals in the group based on anyone's performance but their own. Otherwise it's just another form of collective punishment, which is pretty damn unethical.
He thought he thought he could get away with that because it was his last semester and he had been accepted into the masters program at Stanford. We talked to the professor and the professor kicked him out of the class.
I think writing code on paper is actually a very good exercise, but professors who get upset over missing semicolons can go to hell.
Really our detectors don't check AI use at all. You can probably chatgbt it all and I couldn't really tell. However, they check if this sentence matches with a sentence either out there on the internet in the primary sources or, most often, from another students submitted assignment from our or a partner university using the same saas. And people are getting caught and having their college career ruined just from that, straight up copying and pasting with no paraphrasing even and thinking we won't notice that.
They must have gotten away with highway robbery in highschool during the COVID years. Employers will have to look at this COVID generation with a big side eye and put more emphasis on in person tests of knowledge. Maybe they should use the various testing centers used for MCAT/GRE/LSAT/etc for these remote interviews where they provide a locked down desktop and have cameras surveilling the room.
If current AI were used, I suspect it would be strongly biased in favor of those good at prompt engineering, regardless of subject matter.
Yes, students are going to cheat, they always have. If you are a college professor and you don't want to reward cheaters, make large percentages of a student's grade come from in person tests with no electronics allowed. Simple.
Tell the students up front at the beginning of the course. They're almost surely 18 year olds at least and legal adults.
What a college shouldn't do is outsource "detection" (much less in-source it), which is impossible to accomplish at an adequately low False Positive rate.
Students have always cheated, yes, but the barrier is UNBELIEVABLY low now. Take a picture, get the answer. This has never been a thing on such a large scale. No one knows how to deal with this.
In person testing is a solution for most issues, but not all. First off, class time is precious. I shouldn't have to waste incredibly valuable instruction time doing the actual test. We should be reviewing the test and learning things. Second, on-line classes are massive for many if not all schools. Requiring students to show up physically is both inconvenient, and (depending on which accrediting agency you are accredited by) not allowed.
It's not that simple. No problem of this scope will be simple.
What seems to have shifted is that the consequences are getting far less severe. Cheating on an exam used to be an expulsion-worthy offense. Now it's just "you get a zero" at most. In that environment, why not cheat? Why not be blatant about it?
AI isn't particularly provable. Worse, a lot of professors are lazy and will rely on tools that tell them something was produced with AI; and like any tool, they'll produce false positives. Just imagine being expelled for writing because you don't make spelling mistakes, and do use em-dashes, bullet points and typographic emphasis.
Reminds me of this: https://youtu.be/rbzJTTDO9f4
Perhaps the only way to really to provide evidence against cheating accusations is to also provide a version history of the document the student worked on over time, plus notes (hand written preferably), and so on?
That would exponentially increase the workload of educators though, so it's unlikely to be taken up.
(I'm an instructor in a vocational field - students need to demonstrate their skills to achieve qualification, rather than write essays/reports/etc. - so AI isn't as a significant deal as it is in the academic fields.)
Have a final be worth 50% of a student's grade. Have very cheap by the hour proctors proctor the test. Even if it was just during class time, it's just one class. To ensure pretty fair grading, it seems a small price to pay.
> Second, on-line classes are massive for many if not all schools. Requiring students to show up physically is both inconvenient, and (depending on which accrediting agency you are accredited by) not allowed.
Mkay, make them come in one time. If it's online only, then... whelp you're out of luck. Although, I think the students were cheating mightily on online-only before AI.
It is that simple, if what you're looking for is a fair grading framework.
One possible solution is to remove technology but then you’ll need to detect smart glasses and other hidden devices. Another possible solution is to expect the use of AI and design assessments that are so hard that you have to work in tandem with AI otherwise you can’t get a good grade.
The nice thing about monitored testing is that it makes cheating hard, and if you catch somebody there's usually incontrovertible proof.
If college is designed to make you a productive member of society then they are woefully failing at it.
I don’t write my papers on a typewriter or use the Dewey decimal system to find books. Colleges need to get better at accelerating with the speed of society
In middle school arithmetic, you are not allowed to use calculators.
In high school calculus calculators are OK, but you are not allowed to use CAS systems.
In college-level math, CAS is usually OK, but you need to derive its input by hand.
It sounds that what you are wishing for is "vocational school" - no advanced education, just specific skills for a specific profession. As long as that profession does not change too much, students get to be "productive members of society" immediately after graduation. Colleges are supposed to be better, teaching the whole skill tree so that the student can go on beyond what's known.
(Unfortunately they are only "supposed to".. in practice a lot of colleges are no more than more expensive vocational schools).
It seems to me that making productive members of society is hard to do let alone measure or define. It's also not something institutions seem to factor into their decisions much.
I don't know where this ends up.
spondylosaurus•6h ago
kayodelycaon•6h ago
It’s kind of like expecting professor of biology to do fieldwork.
grues-dinner•5h ago
To be fair the best lessons and then lectures where you actually learned were always the ones when the lecturer used the black/whiteboards. The ones where they just read though prepared PowerPoints were deathly dull and completely lacking in engagement.
I am extremely grateful that I managed to get through the primary/secondary school system before PowerPoint, digital projectors and "smart whiteboards" took education by the throat, and that it hadn't completely subsumed higher education either (but it was beginning to go that way).
Of course, you can be a dreadful teacher and be unable to use PowerPoint or any other teaching method, but you could also plausibly be one of world's best educators and have never touched PowerPoint.
theamk•4h ago
You can have dull professors with either blackboard or with projector. But professors who care can do significantly more with computer vs blackboard, especially with disciplines where videos might be useful.