One More Time: Cheating is Overwhelming in College
By Professor Doom
Last
time I discussed the paper-writing industry, making all papers submitted in
online classes (and most in traditional classes) suspect. Online courses also
have tests. Those are suspect, too.
Admnistrator: “Studies show that Integrity Oaths reduce
the incidence of cheating.”
--it’s
true, but the reduction isn’t much, still allows for a great deal of cheating,
and the studies rarely consider the possibility that a cheater would break an
oath made to a machine.
I can’t help but suspect the widespread cheating I’ve observed with my
own eyes is a huge factor in the greater success of college students in online
courses. The primary, hysterically poor, defense colleges have against cheating
is forcing students to agree to some sort of “Integrity Oath”, where they
promise not to cheat. Would a cheater also lie on an oath? Administration seems
to think “absolutely not,” and so considers such oaths to be an inviolable measure
to prevent cheating. More likely, of course, administration doesn’t really care
about the integrity of the institution.
Tests administered to kids in public online schools are proctored and
regulated, but at the college level, a student merely has to say he has
integrity, via an Oath, to be allowed to take online tests without oversight.
Most online tests are multiple choice or short answer, often with a time limit,
and often the software won’t allow other programs to run while the test is
being taken (to prevent a student from looking up the answers on the internet,
for example). For a college student at home, of course, even if no ringer can
be hired, it’s trivial to set up two computers if need be, or buy a smartphone,
and simply search online for the answer to any multiple choice
question…seriously, how is it that administration has never thought of this
simple method to get around the laughable
anti-cheating ideas in most online test-taking software?
“Grant
money and special leave will be granted to faculty that translate their courses
into a 100% online format.”
--the
notice that motivated me to create an online statistics course in the 90s.
Some colleges force online students to come into campus to take critical
tests and exams, and this does grant some legitimacy to online courses, but
this is discouraged by administration—forcing the student to come on campus
violates the entire purpose of online courses reaching a wider market, after
all. “100% online”, a course that does not require students to come to any
campus, is the goal of most online developed courses for this reason. “100%
online courses” maximize the increase in the potential student base, and
integrity is casually sacrificed by administration for such a goal.
Administration claims that it’s simply not feasible to set up proctored
testing for online students scattered around the country, which is why no
online schools have it. Somehow, they’re unaware that Educational Testing Service (ETS)
offers proctored testing centers across the country…it’s such an obvious
measure to stop cheating on tests, but completely overlooked, “for some
reason.”
“I’ve looked over the two papers,
and the students say the similarities are because they studied together. Give
both these students a passing grade.”
--Administrator,
overruling a faculty member who, strangely, thought it was unlikely students
would type up word for word identical paragraphs in a two page paper.
Cheating in college or elsewhere isn’t viewed the same as it was in
times past. Although I’ve caught many a cheater, as have my associates, even
the most egregious of violators will not be removed from college. The student
rarely drops the course, forcing the faculty member to view the cheater very
kindly or face a brutal evaluation—a cheating student’s opinion can actually
influence a faculty member’s chance of keeping his job! Imagine if criminals
could influence who could work as a security guard; I imagine wheelchair-bound,
blind, deaf, prone-to-narcolepsy guards would be quite popular! The equivalent
to these types of guards as professors certainly are popular on campuses.
“If you give the student a 0 for the
assignment, she will fail, preventing graduation this semester. Please allow
the student to re-submit the paper.”
--Administrative
semi-overruling how one faculty handled a cheating student. Sure, the faculty
was politely asked, and could refuse…and look for another job next semester. If
you punish a student for cheating, that student WILL go to admin and complain. Admin
doesn’t like student complaints.
The penalty for getting caught cheating
is, most often, nothing at all past not getting a benefit for cheating. Imagine
if the penalty for getting caught robbing a bank was limited to that you had to
return any money you stole; with nothing to lose, anyone would give it a try.
Under these circumstances, I don’t blame students for cheating, and cheating
can’t be even be called disrespectful in a system nearly void of integrity in
every way.
Any serious attempt to find cheating succeeds on a wide scale; even with
hundreds of incidents of cheating in a University of Florida computer course,
there were no expulsions1. The students were even warned about
exactly how they would be caught cheating in that course, and it changed
nothing, they went ahead and cheated anyway using a method they were informed
in advance would get them caught. One student even challenged what penalties
she did receive, excusing her cheating because “students cheated in years
past.” Hey, if one guy successfully robs a bank, that means it’s ok for me to
rob banks too, right? Ok, maybe some students do rather have it coming.
With student integrity at this level, and administration unmotivated to
remove warm bodies for any reason, it’s madness to introduce a method of course
delivery, online, that is perhaps the
most conducive to cheating possible. With at least 60% of college students
admitting they’re cheating (some reports put it at 98% self-reporting
cheating), with cheaters having higher GPAs (more than half a point higher)
than non-cheaters, 85% of cheaters believing cheating is essential to college
success, 95% of cheaters not getting caught, and, most damningly, with the
public more concerned about cheating than college officials, it’s unlikely the
cheating issue will change anytime soon2. I have to use the word
“issue” instead of “problem” when describing cheating, because my bosses don’t
consider it a problem, unless the student gets caught and complains about whatever punishment I mete out. It’s been made
clear that everything is best if the cheaters don’t get caught in the first
place.
Even if cheating weren’t a serious issue, it’s fairly clear from the
unprepared online students that come to my traditional courses that learning is
much reduced in an online environment. Employers, the “real world” if you will,
also generally hold online degrees in low regard. Even from an accredited
institution, online degrees are worth nothing when it comes time to get a job.
My own institution generally tosses such applications in the trash when we have
a position open.
It’s no surprise that online learning is minimal; almost all students in
the modern world spend a decade or more in the public school system, learning
in traditional settings little different than at Plato’s Academy, a few
thousand years ago: a teacher stands with students gathered around, paying
attention and asking questions. This really is how most humans have learned for
millennia: being taught by another human. It would be surprising if suddenly
switching to a new method of delivery were particularly useful. It’s about as
reasonable as a suddenly switching from holding your fork in your right hand to
holding it in your left and expecting to eat a meal just as smoothly, if not
better.
Cheating is wildly rampant in higher education, but students are only a
little to blame. They know there is no penalty, and considering how worthless
most degrees are, there’s little harm. Does it really matter if the student
with a degree in Political Science of Women cheated to get that degree? Still,
the fact remains that higher education is a system where the bosses, the
administration, are highly motivated to remove all integrity, and to punish
faculty that dare keep integrity in the system.
The promotion of cheating may be administration’s greatest achievement
in undermining higher education, but they have other ways to improve “retention,”
the only goal of administrators. I’ll address some of them in the next essay,
but until then I encourage the reader to think of what these ways could be, the
better to appreciate the extraordinary imagination of administrative avarice.
Think about it.
1)
Alcantara, Chris, “University of Florida
Students Caught Cheating on Computer Science Projects.” The Independent Florida
Alligator. March, 13, 2012.
2)
Online Education Database. “8 Astonishing Stats
on Academic Cheating.”
Last time I discussed the paper-writing industry, making all papers submitted in online classes (and most in traditional classes) suspect. Online courses also have tests. Those are suspect, too. paper-writing.typepad.com
ReplyDeleteTo judge by the link, these guys are pretty terrible...no wonder they have to spam for customers.
ReplyDelete