Cheating in Online Courses
A recent article in The Chronicle of Higher Education suggests that students cheat more in online than in face-to-face classes. The article tells the story of Bob Smith (not his real name, obviously) who was a student in an online science course. Bob logged in once a week for half an hour in order to take a quiz. He didn’t read a word of his textbook, didn’t participate in discussions, and still got an A. Bob pulled this off, he explained, with the help of a collaborative cheating effort. Interestingly, Bob is enrolled at a public university in the U.S., and claims to work diligently in all his other (classroom) courses. He doesn’t cheat in those courses, he explains, but with a busy work and school schedule, the easy A is too tempting to pass up.
Bob’s online cheating methods deserve some attention. He is representative of a population of students that have striven to keep up with their instructor’s efforts to prevent cheating online. The tests were designed in a way that made cheating more difficult, including limited time to take the test, and randomized questions from a large test bank (so that no two students took the exact same test).
But the design of the test had two potential flaws: first, students were informed in real time whether their answers were right or wrong; second, they could take the test anytime they wanted. Bob and several friends devised a system to exploit these weaknesses. They took the test one at a time, and posted the questions together with the correct answers in a shared Google document as they went. None of them studied, so the first one or two students often bombed the test, but students who took the test later did quite well.
When we hear such stories of online cheating, the reasons for this behavior seems rather simple: It doesn’t take a criminal mastermind to come up with ways to cheat on a test when there’s no supervision and the entire Internet is at hand. Gone are the quaint days of minutely lettered cheat sheets, formulas written on the underside of baseball cap bills, sweat-smeared key words on students’ palms. Now it’s just a student sitting alone at home, looking up answers online and simply filling them in.
While we can probably all agree that cheating in online courses is easier to pull off than in a physical classroom, I suspect that this simple intuition is far from the whole story, and that e-cheating is more than just a increased ease of getting away with it.
When my colleagues and I have examined the effects of being caught on dishonesty, we found that by and large changing the probability of being caught doesn’t really alter the level of dishonesty. In one of our experiments we asked two Master’s students at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev named Eynav, who is blind, and Tali, who has normal sight, to take a cab back and fourth between the train station and the university twenty times. We chose this route for a particular reason: if the driver activates the meter, the fare comes out to around $7 (25 NIS). However, there is a customary rate on this route that costs around $5.50 (20 NIS) if the meter is not activated. Both Eynav and Tali asked to have the meter activated every time they caught a cab, regardless of whether the drivers informed them of the cheaper customary rate. At the end of the ride, the women would pay the fare, wait a few minutes, then take another cab back to where they started.
What we found was that Tali was charged more than Eynav, despite the fact that they both insisted on paying by the meter. Eynav quickly supplied us with the explanation behind this curious phenomenon. “I heard the cab drivers activate the meter when I asked them to,” she told us, “but before we reached our final destination, I heard many of them turn the meter off so that the fare ended up close to 20 NIS.” This never happened to Tali. What’s more, many other experiments with undergraduates yielded similar results. What these results suggest is that simply making the situation such that people cannot get caught does not automatically lead to higher levels of dishonesty.
So if it’s not necessarily the fear of getting caught, what might be the reasons for increased cheating? Based on our research, I would propose that the primary reason is the increased psychological distance between the dishonest act and its significance, and between teacher and student doing seo services. The difference a little distance can make is rather impressive. Take the results from a study of around 10,000 golfers who were asked—among other things—how likely golfers were to cheat by moving the lie of a ball by 4 inches through various means: by nudging it with the golf club; by kicking it; or by picking it up and moving it. What these golfers told us was that 23% of golfers would likely move a ball with their club while only 14% and 10% would move it by kicking it and picking it up, respectively. What this tells us is that the extra distance provided by the club allows for twice as much cheating as the unavoidably conscious and culpable act of picking up the ball and moving it.
What does this have to do with cheating in online courses? Online classes are by definition taken at a distance, from the comfort of the student’s home where they are removed from the teacher, the other students, and the academic institution. This distance doesn’t merely allow room for people to get away with dishonest behavior; it creates the psychological distance that allows people to further relax their moral standards. I suspect that this aspect of psychological distance, and not simply the ease of pulling it off, is at the heart of the online cheating problem.
There is another important reason why we should care whether the cause for online dishonesty is due to its ease or to a change in the perceived moral meaning of the action. If online cheating is simply a matter of a cost-benefit analysis, we can assume that over time online universities will find ways to monitor and supervise students and this way prevent such behavior. However, if we think that the root cause of online cheating is more relaxed internal morals, then time is working against us.
Let’s think for a minute about illegal downloads. Have you ever downloaded a song or TV show illegally? How badly do you feel about it? When I ask my students these questions, almost all of them admit to having plenty of illegally downloaded files on their computers—and they don’t feel badly about it. As it turns out, dishonesty lies on a continuum: there are behaviors we feel badly about, which is where our own morality holds us back. But as cheating in a particular domain becomes more commonplace, the negative feelings associated with it decrease until we don’t really feel badly at all.
Let’s return to Bob and to cheating in online courses. This kind of behavior in online classes worries me because it is becoming more pervasive, and once we reach a point of moral indifference, it is nearly impossible to change this behavior. I don’t think we’ve reached this point yet, so we need to work as hard as we can to counteract the trend toward dishonesty. Otherwise what’s often considered an important tool for democracy in education could be made worthless.

The Honest Truth About Dishonesty: How We Lie to Everyone - Especially Ourselves

Great and intriguing stuff. The mention of illegal file sharing really brings up something especially obvious. Legality has little correlation with cheating or ethics. People’s intuition tells them that cheating on the tests is unethical even though the rules for the class do not emphasize legality or legal consequences; they cheat because of social pressure, some social acceptance of cheating, and the personal benefits. On the other hand, intuition tells us that sharing music with each other is positive and part of engaging with culture. I highly doubt that most file-sharing folks feel like they are cheating the way they do with cheating on tests.
I do have the same feeling that social pressure, in some cases causes students to cheat. I was asked to work as a group on some individual assignments. As I have paid the tuition fee, I refused to forego the chance of learning. Since then I was ostracized from these people. The good thing was I did not really care.
Dan, another good post…..as always my first thought is….how do we change this? How do you encourage personal integrity when the ‘world’ allows and by design, encourages this? I know much is caused by reduced cost (and reduced accountability by placing it on personal integrity).
Very nice post. Certainly part of the issue is that this may be a part of our human nature to cheat, but I also think it is something a little deeper. I agree with Aaron”s reply that a lot has to do with the social pressure to succeed, and the stima of “failing.”
I think that it is part of our nature and curiosity to look for the weaknesses and loopholes. To the most logically-thinking people, whether it is correct or not, if a weakness can be found and exploited, then they feel little or no remorse in taking advantage of this. This, I think is also a society-driven “value”, which of course is not a value at all. But it is socially acceptable behavior.
And, people don’t often concern themselves with the consequences until they are upon them.
Martina
It is true. For people who share the seeds for BT downloading, I do not think they are so generous to breach the law for making a better world. (Or helping some strangers for software or movies) I trust most of them are curious at the beginning while cracking the security of software. If they succeed, they take pride in showing their tricks by sharing the software online.
The cheating ring you describe also has another characteristic that you found leads to more cheating: each individual posting test questions can feel that they are doing it to benefit somebody – their fellow conspirators – and that impulse to help somebody, especially somebody one feels “close” to is a powerful incentive to abandon the morality of honesty in favor of the morality of helping a friend.
As this group continues to cheat on tests, their feeling of closeness to each other will grow, and the feeling of distance from the teacher will grow.
I guess one measure the school could take is to require that all the students take the test at the same time. Also, as you’ve stated in your books, remind the students at the time they take a quiz, of the importance of honesty in a long-distance class set-up. Signing a pledge at the start of the class and again at the end that their answers are their own and that they will not share questions or answers with their fellow students may help, as you’ve found that this kind of reminder often elicits a non-cheating response.
This class, though, I fear is hopeless. Once the students have a well-organized cheating “ring”, where the first students take a hit of a bad grade to benefit the later students… that kind of group camaraderie would be difficult to undo. The first students with the bad grades may feel positively virtuous in having obtained vital information for their fellow cheaters at great expense to themselves.
I’m thinking that one of the keys to the dishonesty you study is the trade-off of weighing one “virtue” against another. We all want to be honest, help our friends, and get good grades. If we can achieve 2 of those, while abandoning the 3rd.. we still have 2 sources of good opinion about ourselves to concentrate on… and helping our friends is one of the most powerful motivators in the world, I have to believe.
To [mitchki]: Yes, in a class, students may have the desire to build or grow the “closeness” between them, I agree with you that benevolence exists as human virtue. But I cannot imagine a professional hacker in Russia would care to build acquaintance with somebody who need a cracked copy of WindowsX in HongKong. I am a skeptical Chinese, I believe some cheating are more an act of heroism.
Interesting Cliff.. I’m assuming that the “cheater” is framing his justifications to keep thinking about himself as a “good person,” even when the actions are not strictly honest.
A professional hacker in Russia may simply want to think of him/herself as a clever, winner, heroic and wealthier person. This may be a way in which hacking is different that cheating to do well in a class. Presumably there is some sort of community feeling in a class, even an online class, unless the student is truly disaffected.
I wonder whether you could reduce the psychological distance, and thus cheating, on the test by posting a picture of the professor on the screen while the students take the test.
One of things that I always worry about is how transparency about a few individuals refusing to play by the rules of the game has on others who were playing fair in the beginning. At least anecdotally, I have felt that when I have discussed Dan’s research about cheating with a diverse set of individuals, they either react with moral outrage or cynical acceptance of the phenomenon. However, surprisingly both groups end up becoming more cooperative with dishonest behavior, albeit for different motivations. The cynical people simply embrace that this is something that’s pervasive and the righteous succumb to fears of losing in the competition because we as humans are biased towards overestimating foul play.
I know people personally who are otherwise extremely morally sound but when they fear that they are going to suffer as the result of perceived foul-play they will try to compensate by cheating themselves. This isn’t a problem in the West currently. I am from the developing world and the sophisticated arguments (economic incentives/market forces/pragmatism/short-termism/) you hear to justify (or maybe just explain) corruption and dishonesty is proof that if it’s part of your collective consciousness, then it might already be on it’s way to become a part of your culture.
This is really extremely difficult to undo because if everyone is operating with the default position that everyone else you will meet on any given day is slightly corrupt in some way, then based on that, you justify your own corruption.
I am not suggesting that we should keep quiet about it and not say anything or stop trying to figure out the solution, but I am a little scared about what the worst possible outcome (or how likely it is) of openly talking about it entails. Would it have similar effects as copy-cat suicides when the media fails to present suicide stories in a restricted or curated manner? Would public trust in each other and our institutions take a blow? These are questions worth pondering about for everyone who *knows*. I certainly hope that the west does not descend into a state of relative moral bankruptcy that developing countries are still struggling to shake off as it has become part of public consciousness.
I am currently working on my master’s degree at a prestigious university. Although we do have tests, they usually count for a very small percentage of the final grade in each course. Our daily tremendous amounts of reading, as well as writing, about the subject matter covered for each week, in addition to research papers, are the critical portion of the final grade. Although it could be possible, it would be extremely difficult to cheat due to the fact that someone other than the student would have to have great knowledge of the subject being covered and keep up with the work on a daily basis.
Students generally take online classes that are relatively easy and when they just want to get the class credit and not learn anything, such as GE classes…
I would also say that most students think they can outsmart the professors in online classes so that is more of a challenge than actually studying.
“Bob’s” cheating aside for a moment, cheating is built into an education system that grades on curves. Too often students’ grades do not reflect their actual performance. A dozen scores in the 60s on a tough exam, even if they are the top scores in class, do not deserve As (nor Bs or Cs for that matter) yet that is exactly what the students receive. In turn those undeserved scores inflate GPAs and make students appear to be better performers. To me, that’s cheating as well. It falsifies actual performance and it’s unfair to those who actually do perform at a higher level in those subjects.
If educators wish to reduce cheating in the classroom they should begin with revamping the way they grade performance.
I wonder how much of this has to do with tests that require the right answer. With a move towards competency-based learning, one could imagine students demonstrating mastery over a subject in a way that isn’t the standard test format. Any thoughts on how this might affect cheating behaviros?
The results seen in the experiment with Tali and Eynav may not have anything to do with honesty. It may just be the social dynamics of how people treat blind people.
In general I feel people want to be more helpful to disabled people. So, certainly, in the case where the taxi driver has the opportunity to cheat the passenger, you’d expect less cheating of blind people. If there was no customary lower fare, you still might see the blind person being charged less. Raising the possibility of cheating (by telling the driver to turn on the meter), might in fact have the opposite effect of causing the driver to want to help the blind person more.
So there are two factors at play here: 1) the opportunity to cheat and 2) the person being cheated. Given the chance, few people will steal candy from a baby.
In the survey of cheating in golf, the issue may be less the extra distance provided by the club, but the amount of deviance from the rules of the game. The club is how you move the ball in golf, so continuing to play by this rule, but cheating on “when” you’re allowed to move the ball may feel less like cheating.
The psychological distance may not be distance from self, but distance from the rules.
It would be interesting to see if using a stick to move the ball would produce results closer to the club or to the foot. A stick would give you the psychological distance that the foot doesn’t, but not be an instrument of the game, like the club is.
Which all speaks to how can you change the dynamics of cheating during tests. You could change the relationship of the teacher and students, by either making the students more sympathetic to the teacher (e.g. tell them the teacher may get fired because too many students have been cheating) or increasing the depth of relationship with the teacher (e.g. by hosting video chats to get to know the teacher more, or providing a bio of the teacher’s personal life).
Since both the test taking and the cheating occur via a computer, I don’t see how you can change the instrument of cheating to be different from the instrument of test-taking.
But it would be interesting to see if students had to record an audio of their answer, how cheating would change. Shifting to a different mode of thinking (written vs verbal) might feel like a greater deviance from the rules of the game (assuming that sharing of answers continues to use the written form).
To Trevor: I agree with your first point. Who wants to deprive the disabled? And I think it is a good idea to experiment whether the removal of the customary lower fare would change the result. My blind guess is, Eynav will be charged at the standard rate, as the “framework” of courtesy discount has been removed.
er… so cheating as a concept is a judgement call. We can do what we want and get away with it for sure, whatever. Yet, we know, we did it and so that makes feel less about ourselves. so for me its always ‘nil pois!”
x
Too bad they didn’t put all that cheating effort into studying. They might have done as well and learned things that would help them later in their careers.
Actually, I think the cheaters learned lessons that will be very valuable in their careers (unfortunately).
Immediately, I thought of the ‘bottom line’ parallel in corporate America – many companies/shareholders/executives want to show profitable results and tend to overlook a lot of ‘grey area’ when it comes to exactly how those results are achieved. Many questionable methods are often sanctioned or not investigated too deeply as long as there are favorable results to show for it. Corporate structures are usually hierarchical with the same kind of ‘distance’ described in the article existing between the CEO and other workers.
On the flip side, society as a whole may need to redefine what we think of as ‘cheating’ in this new Information Age. Innovation and using the tools available to help achieve desired results should be applauded, not condemned. With instant access to more information than ever before conceived, there really is no need to remember huge amounts of detailed data or facts. More important is the development of the higher order thinking skills needed to filter, organize and critically assess all the information that can and should be accessed. Courses today (online or otherwise) should not be designed on a content-basis but more on a critical analysis basis to reflect the world in which we now live.
All that being said, it really comes down to personal honor and integrity. As a society we need to value the methods used just as highly or more than the results achieved. That message has to be reflected and practiced throughout. Otherwise, our children (who face ever-increasing competition and pressure to get those A’s in high school and college) are getting mixed signals from the world in which they are just trying to fit.
ok, this is off topic but anyway, it’s not too long.
imagine a guy with a monthly entertainment budget of 40-50usd per month, this guy can perhaps eat pizza, go to the movies or buy magazines/music, but not the three things at the same time (in the same month I mean). I won’t put in consideration how miserable his life is, if he deserves or not, but here is my point: what is the ethical ground to forbid such an individual of enjoying music/books/movies ‘ilegally’? its not like he will be buying that stuff if he didn’t had access to it by illegal means. I just don’t see the damage to third parties when an economically depleted individual chooses the free way. How it is different than him spending his free time at his wealthy friend’s house (who always buys legal content) watching (for free) the friend’s movie catalog, magazine collection or well equiped library?
They cheat because they can. Course Management Systems are easy to “get around” Learning Management Systems make the learning journey individualized and provide granular tracking of student engagement..to learn more about the way pedagogy is changing I recommend
http://www.adlnet.gov/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/Choosing-LMS-v.2.4_201104132.pdf
and http://www.ithaka.org/ithaka_news/barriers-to-adoption-of-online-learning-systems-in-us-higher-education.pdf
You’re really going to compare file downloading to cheating in a college course? Is speeding the same thing as cheating in a college course too?
yes, yes, they share many resemblances.
Like what? You take a college course, you get credit with the assumption that you learned the material. Your entire expensive degree is based on this fact. Now what exactly does this have to do with copying your friend’s music collection?
Ridiculous.
Is cheating in one area qualitatively different than cheating in another?
Of course it is.
Wouldn’t you say driving drunk is qualitatively different than breaking the speed limit?
The similarity is that in both downloading pirated software and cheating in an online course, the person can tell themselves that their actions won’t hurt anybody else. The issue is “cheating”.. crossing the line of integrity, taking something that has not been strictly earned.
In the case of diving, the issue is not integrity so much as public safety and the law. A different venue, and i think governed by a more complex set of values.
Except when you’re copying your friends mp3s you’re not taking something from anyone and you’re not misrepresenting yourself. Is there a lack of integrity? Yes. It’s against the law after all. But beyond that, they share very little in common. Singing happy birthday to patrons of a restaurant is illegal too, but what that has to do with effectively buying a fake diploma and misrepresenting yourself and your knowledge, well, it seems kind of silly to me to compare these things.
Also, what difference does it make when public safety is concerned? You’re completely avoiding the question. Are speeding and drunk driving qualitatively different? Both are unethical, since they are breaking the law. I would argue that drunk driving might be immoral but I would never argue the same thing for speeding. Maybe a better analogy is cheating on the driving test when you’re a horrible driver and can’t get a license any other way? Is that worse that speeding? I think so.
When you compare file sharing to cheating in a class, all you’re doing is making a logically flawed, almost ridiculous point about file sharing at the expense of cheapening cheating in a class online or traditional. Your criteria of “not hurting anyone else” really doesn’t justify the comparison in my book. It is certainly not a natural comparison as there is so much more dishonesty going on when someone cheats in this way.
Thought experiment:
One person is being tested on school. He develops a great mind trick that allows him to remember previous study by a very clever way of associating weired images to numbers, dates and words. He gets A+ on this test. He never tells anyone about his memory method and keep using it to get good grades all the time. He has an advantage that nobody else has.
This other person, is also been tested on school. He develops a great phone trick that allows him to pull awnsers from a database in his home computer. He gets A+ all the time too and never tells anyone about this. He also have an advantage that nobody else has.
Why is the frist person more honest than the second one? Both will forget what they learned, they just have different methods. Memory tricks ARE CHEATING TOO.
And after all, you’re not acctually testing if they know what the teacher said during the year. They’re been tested if the can get a good grade. Once you put numbers to be archevied, the objective of “the game” is to inflate the number, not to learn.
One of the reasons that it is more feasible to cheat while taking online courses is because students can get by with no relationship with their instructor. Therefore, it is a lot harder for an instructor to detect work that sounds worded suspiciously like someone else.
It is also easier to justify tricking someone you don’t know. Looking the instructor in the eye and being seen during class may well make it much more difficult to justify cheating to yourself.
Dan, I really like this blog and I am thinking about posting it on the front page of my on-line classes (hope I am not violating copy rights). I do not agree w/ you, however, that incentives play a small roll in our actions. The data from a taxi experiment is just too small. I bet you that people would down-load less movies and songs if they had a real understanding on who and how much is lost due to a free downloads. Guilty feeling is a powerful incentive not to do something.
There is no doubt that this is very helpful post for us. Here the writer has discussed about an important topics. He has provided some information about online cheating in online course. It will work to make people aware of this critical subject.
Update from the Chronicle of Higher Ed: Coursera is adding an honor code prompt before every upload. This might be one of the best real-world tests on a large scale of the lab experiments that you (Prof. Ariely) have described to us about how reminding people about various ethics codes increase moral behavior.
http://chronicle.com/blogs/wiredcampus/coursera-adds-honor-code-prompt-in-response-to-reports-of-plagiarism/39328?cid=pm&utm_source=pm&utm_medium=en
Online classes are an enigma to me. My son took a high school AP Statistics course. We hired a high school local stats teacher to help tutor him since the class gave no instruction. He received an A the first semester, a C the second semester and a 5 on the AP test. In a class such as this, what good is the online class?
Cheating at the time of online class does not a matter .some of them having talent ,they are adopt for exam with out guiding but others need to face problem while they appear exams.
Interested but the time exam only it will create problems by with out anything …. so try learn from online classes as little bit don’t omit the hole class in the same time enjoy the student life its amazing fact but never back at the time we expecting …..
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