Shelley says he is convinced the majority of the 288 students in his health-care law course cheated on their April 24 final exam using AI.

“I had eight per cent of my class receive 100 per cent on the multiple choice. Fifty-five per cent scored over 90 per cent. I’ve never seen marks like that in 20 years of teaching,”

The tenured professor, who has spent 10 years at the London, Ont., university, says he decided not to use proctoring software because he believes it does not prevent cheating.

  • SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    31
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    16 days ago

    he decided not to use proctoring software because he believes it does not prevent cheating.

    Because it doesn’t. Agentic AI will work around it easily.

    My entire department is going back to paper exams and quizzes in the fall of 2026. Similar reasons. These kids who cheated in from high school are going to have a bad time.