Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It’s because they’re cheating.
My class has scores 20% above what they were before COVID. I thought the cheating would get better when we returned but the kids are still using their group chats. I’m not allowed to take their phones away and the administration doesn’t back me up when I catch them cheating.
- Teacher
Have you considered how dramatically the landscape has changed with the rise of AI study tools in just the past few years? Before COVID, these tools simply didn’t exist. I’d imagine that many students are performing well today not necessarily because they’re cheating (though I’m sure some do!), but because they’re studying far more efficiently. AI tools can now generate study guides, notes, practice problems, and more resources that give students a huge advantage. Even when teachers don’t fully cover the material, that’s no longer a barrier to earning an A. Students are supplementing any gaps with a combination of YouTube, Khan Academy, and AI.
Anonymous wrote:At our private, all essay writing is now done in class - to prevent AI, tutor help, etc. All research papers have a teacher-created Google doc and every outline, quote, draft and edit must be made within that doc...the history shows everything and kid can't cut and paste something pre-written into the doc. Math and science tests are all hand written in class. There are different questions if you take the test at a later date. Also, phones have been banned during the school day since fall 2024. Very smart.
Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe this true. My DS went to a public CA HS with 2000+ students. 3.8 uw was top 10%. 4.2 w was top 10%. But the majority of kids weren’t taking APs, maybe some honors. Top 50% was probably around 3.3 to 3.5 w, not much higher for w because kids take less APs and honors the farther down you go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think there is some cheating, but my kid has to claw and fight for every "A" he gets and does not cheat--he has said that he catches other kids trying to look at his answers. He goes to a private school, if that matters-- although I think cheating happens everywhere.
He recently turned in a partner project where he did all the work and had to put his partner's name on the final result. I can verify that because he spent an entire weekend stressing/doing the whole thing. I told him "that's life-- you'll have all kinds of people who won't pull their weight, and you just need to learn who they and deal with it."
There is a lot of pressure placed on kids now-- I can imagine why they feel they must resort to cheating.
Group projects always have different levels of contribution to the final project and that is life. I am sure teachers intentionally pair weaker students with stronger for many of these projects..i would do the same. It is a learning opportunity all the way around.
I have seen parent march up to the school and demand that their snowflake be placed with other strong students. Very short sighted approach IMO.
If you help others cheat, they help you cheat. You both benefit relative to the non-cheaters.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It’s because they’re cheating.
My class has scores 20% above what they were before COVID. I thought the cheating would get better when we returned but the kids are still using their group chats. I’m not allowed to take their phones away and the administration doesn’t back me up when I catch them cheating.
- Teacher
This is so unfair to kids who don’t cheat. My son has a difficult science class first period and kids are take screenshots or pictures of the exam during the test. Then they are sharing them with kids who have the class later in the day. My son has been pressured to do the same but refuses. He lost a friend over it who wanted him to get the test question and his friend who give him the math questions since that kid had math earlier in the day. How are teachers not realizing the class average is increasing as the day progresses?
Why would kids help others cheat? I don't get this. The other kids in their grade are their direct competition for college admits. Cheating really harms the ones supplying the test/answers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It’s because they’re cheating.
My class has scores 20% above what they were before COVID. I thought the cheating would get better when we returned but the kids are still using their group chats. I’m not allowed to take their phones away and the administration doesn’t back me up when I catch them cheating.
- Teacher
Have you considered how dramatically the landscape has changed with the rise of AI study tools in just the past few years? Before COVID, these tools simply didn’t exist. I’d imagine that many students are performing well today not necessarily because they’re cheating (though I’m sure some do!), but because they’re studying far more efficiently. AI tools can now generate study guides, notes, practice problems, and more resources that give students a huge advantage. Even when teachers don’t fully cover the material, that’s no longer a barrier to earning an A. Students are supplementing any gaps with a combination of YouTube, Khan Academy, and AI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure source, if someone knows, I’d love to see. This is the problem, there is no way, if true, that there isn’t rampant grade inflation. Which does everyone a disservice, really.
At our non-DMV private (which has competitive grade-based entry), less than 20% has a 3.85-4.0. The notion that 50% of a school can have 4.0 or even that 40% could have 4.0 is pretty shocking.
I don't understand how colleges can compare GPA in context since grading systems are so different. I know school's send the school profile, and ours certainly does, but I'm not even sure that's enough given the discrepancy between schools on awarding As.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure source, if someone knows, I’d love to see. This is the problem, there is no way, if true, that there isn’t rampant grade inflation. Which does everyone a disservice, really.
At our non-DMV private (which has competitive grade-based entry), less than 20% has a 3.85-4.0. The notion that 50% of a school can have 4.0 or even that 40% could have 4.0 is pretty shocking.
I don't understand how colleges can compare GPA in context since grading systems are so different. I know school's send the school profile, and ours certainly does, but I'm not even sure that's enough given the discrepancy between schools on awarding As.
Anonymous wrote:Please do more work to read actual sources of news, OP.
Anonymous wrote:
It’s because they’re cheating.
My class has scores 20% above what they were before COVID. I thought the cheating would get better when we returned but the kids are still using their group chats. I’m not allowed to take their phones away and the administration doesn’t back me up when I catch them cheating.
- Teacher