Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I tell my kids the story of how my friend gave me the answers to a math test, and the teacher told the entire class the next day how we had both got the exact same WRONG answer and she knew we had copied off each other, and everyone knew I had copied off my friend, since she was usually much stronger at math.
Parental humiliation anecdotes have a way of teaching kids moral lessons in an amusing way.
You get off on this? Wow. You're really a sick, disgusting person.
Anonymous wrote:I tell my kids the story of how my friend gave me the answers to a math test, and the teacher told the entire class the next day how we had both got the exact same WRONG answer and she knew we had copied off each other, and everyone knew I had copied off my friend, since she was usually much stronger at math.
Parental humiliation anecdotes have a way of teaching kids moral lessons in an amusing way.
Anonymous wrote:My DC is in an MCPS high school. I’ve recently discovered that many students are cheating on so many assignments and tests. I think that it began during virtual learning and is continuing now that they are in person. Having tests and assignments online makes it easy to share answers. They can easily take pictures or videos of their screens and share it.
Have other parents or teachers discovered this?
Anonymous wrote:I’m a HS teacher and it is very difficult to control. Cell phones have made the problem so much worse. Kids are texting answers to each other while in class.
Many kids don’t want to bother putting in any effort because they know they can copy off friends. It is a depressing situation which is hard to manage
Anonymous wrote:To what end? It's high school, not rocket science. If they put same effort into just learning the stuff for the test that they put into cheating, they would also get a good great but they would actually have an education instead of an empty brain.