Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s no more easier to cheat on the AMC 8 this year than any other year.
Parents couldn’t be in the same room as their kids in previous years. This year, they could sit next to their kids and help them while the kid was taking the test.
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s no more easier to cheat on the AMC 8 this year than any other year.
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s still hard to get perfect score even with parent’s help. I think the majority of parents can’t answer all questions correctly within 40 minutes. Some questions are very tricky.
Anonymous wrote:Meh. It would be easy to cheat. Not everyone took the test on the same day at the same time, and the testing window was an entire week. Kids who took the test earlier could share the problems or answers with kids who took the test later in the cycle. Also, if it wasn’t video proctored, parents could have helped with solving the problems.
I’m not suggesting that tons of kids cheated, but I’d take the perfect scorer list and the honor roll lists with a grain of salt.
Anonymous wrote:Meh. It would be easy to cheat. Not everyone took the test on the same day at the same time, and the testing window was an entire week. Kids who took the test earlier could share the problems or answers with kids who took the test later in the cycle. Also, if it wasn’t video proctored, parents could have helped with solving the problems.
I’m not suggesting that tons of kids cheated, but I’d take the perfect scorer list and the honor roll lists with a grain of salt.
Anonymous wrote:For AMC 8 test, it’s all about speed, 40 minutes to complete 25 questions. The time is very tight. Even if the student is fully concentrated on the test, I doubt if he can complete all of them. Does he still have time to cheat?
I agree with you. It is impossible to cheat on the Amc8 because of the strict time limit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious why would a kid cheats in test like this. What would be the gain out there...just to show off?! I don’t quite understand the motivation.
I don't know why kids cheat, but as someone who has proctored for math contests, I can assure you that many kids do cheat. They peek at each other's papers, use hand signals to try to give their friends the answers, sometimes even talk to each other about the test during the test, smuggle in calculators, flip the test and start before it's time, and keep working after time is up. I would guess that they want to please their parents or look good to their peers. Some of these, like taking too much time, wouldn't be possible on AMC 8, but kids could easily have been talking or sharing answers during the test.
Also, the math kangaroo results from last year demonstrate pretty clearly that apparently many parents will help their kids cheat. They ended up with over 10 times as many perfect scores on the online test than they did with the regular tests. I don't know why parents would help their lower elementary kids cheat on a completely trivial contest like Math Kangaroo, but the numbers don't lie.
For AMC 8, people on this forum have already suggested that a high score should help a TJ application. I can easily picture people cheating if they think a higher score will help them get into selective programs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Thanks for sharing what happened with math kangaroo . Sigh It is hard for me to understand some would be willing to cheat or help cheat in order to get a high score for school admission purpose (TJ or college). It is such a bad way of winning.
Ugh. I can understand kids having the desire to cheat and going through with it. They’re kids. But parents helping them cheat has got to be one of the most f’ed up things I’ve heard. Sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious why would a kid cheats in test like this. What would be the gain out there...just to show off?! I don’t quite understand the motivation.
I don't know why kids cheat, but as someone who has proctored for math contests, I can assure you that many kids do cheat. They peek at each other's papers, use hand signals to try to give their friends the answers, sometimes even talk to each other about the test during the test, smuggle in calculators, flip the test and start before it's time, and keep working after time is up. I would guess that they want to please their parents or look good to their peers. Some of these, like taking too much time, wouldn't be possible on AMC 8, but kids could easily have been talking or sharing answers during the test.
Also, the math kangaroo results from last year demonstrate pretty clearly that apparently many parents will help their kids cheat. They ended up with over 10 times as many perfect scores on the online test than they did with the regular tests. I don't know why parents would help their lower elementary kids cheat on a completely trivial contest like Math Kangaroo, but the numbers don't lie.
For AMC 8, people on this forum have already suggested that a high score should help a TJ application. I can easily picture people cheating if they think a higher score will help them get into selective programs.
Thanks for sharing what happened with math kangaroo . Sigh It is hard for me to understand some would be willing to cheat or help cheat in order to get a high score for school admission purpose (TJ or college). It is such a bad way of winning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious why would a kid cheats in test like this. What would be the gain out there...just to show off?! I don’t quite understand the motivation.
I don't know why kids cheat, but as someone who has proctored for math contests, I can assure you that many kids do cheat. They peek at each other's papers, use hand signals to try to give their friends the answers, sometimes even talk to each other about the test during the test, smuggle in calculators, flip the test and start before it's time, and keep working after time is up. I would guess that they want to please their parents or look good to their peers. Some of these, like taking too much time, wouldn't be possible on AMC 8, but kids could easily have been talking or sharing answers during the test.
Also, the math kangaroo results from last year demonstrate pretty clearly that apparently many parents will help their kids cheat. They ended up with over 10 times as many perfect scores on the online test than they did with the regular tests. I don't know why parents would help their lower elementary kids cheat on a completely trivial contest like Math Kangaroo, but the numbers don't lie.
For AMC 8, people on this forum have already suggested that a high score should help a TJ application. I can easily picture people cheating if they think a higher score will help them get into selective programs.
Anonymous wrote:Curious why would a kid cheats in test like this. What would be the gain out there...just to show off?! I don’t quite understand the motivation.