Harvard and the politics of large-scale cheating
Harvard is known for many things, its rigorous academics, its crisp New England campus, its secret societies, and now, what may be the most extensive cheating scandal in Ivy League history. A total of 279 students are now under investigation for collaborating on a take-home exam, with the threat of a year’s expulsion hanging over their heads if found guilty.
Matthew Platt, professor of the course in question (Introduction to Congress), brought the tests before the school’s administration after noticing similarities on a few of the exams, and the investigation mushroomed from there. Students were not permitted to work together on the exam (officially), but now there’s a lot of talk about the instructions, the expectations, and the questions themselves being unclear. I would bet that there are a number of aspects to this situation that led to such a widespread web of cheating.
In general, lack of clarity in expectations is a great instigator of dishonesty, after all, when no one tells you what you can and can’t do, it becomes much easier to decide for yourself what probably is and isn’t okay. For instance, it might seem that asking a peer what he or she thinks a question means if the wording is unclear is pretty reasonable. Then, naturally, that discussion of intent might lead to what the answer could be. In this case, the instructions seem fairly clear, stating that “students may not discuss the exam with others.” However, it appears that the professor cancelled his office hours before the tests were due, which would make it a lot more difficult to clarify any questions. This makes for easy justification.
Also, the subject of the class was Congress, which is itself an institution shot through with ambiguity and famous for its lies and liars. Extensive discussion of corruption could easily engender more dishonest behavior in those taking part (in psychology we call it priming, where we expose participants to a stimulus that alters their behavior as a result, for instance, asking people to do math problems when we want to induce logical thinking). It’s hard to imagine a better primer for dishonesty than a class on Congress. Maybe one on modern financial institutions.
Moreover, people generally agree that cheating in the social domain is often acceptable—we call them little white lies. Like when a friend asks how she looks in something and you say “great!” when you really should say “passable”; that’s often excused from the realm of dishonesty. Or another friend asks what you think of his new girlfriend, and you say “she seems nice!” instead of “she seems boring and self-centered!” We tell these little lies to keep the peace. Yet we generally deny that this is acceptable in the business domain. If you ask your accountant how much money is in such and such an account, giving a number twice as high to make you feel better would be inexcusable. We need to consider that for students, the social and professional circles vastly overlap, which makes it more difficult to separate what’s permissible and what isn’t. This is not to absolve students who cheat, but it’s something to consider. Students often live in the same place they go to class, which is essentially their workplace. Their friends are also their colleagues, and their “bosses” (professors and TAs) are often their friends. All this blending makes can make lines of conduct a bit more indistinct.
None of this is meant to make light of the problem of cheating, or to imply that it’s excusable. But if we want to prevent such things from happening again, we need to think about not just the students, but also the system in which they live and operate. Thus, professors need to work on being crystal clear in instructions. Telling students, for instance, “speak to no one other than the professor or your TA about any aspect of the exam” leaves no gray areas. All that said, it will be interesting to see how things at Harvard shake out …

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

Dishonest are much better self-orgnized. When will honest nd smart demonstrate their competitive advantage?
The key of the problem might not be in the instructions of what can or cannot be done, but rather on the formulation of the problem itself.
In summary: what if the test was itself broken? (i.e. involuntarily pushing students to cheat due to meaningless test designed to be easy to score rather than make students think on their own)
I found the analysis on The Last Psychiatrist blog to be quite enlightening.
http://thelastpsychiatrist.com/2012/09/the_harvard_cheating_scandal_i.html
If you pull onto Interstate 94 off Illinois 60 north of Chicago and you accelerate to 68 miles per hour, you’d better stay in the right lane (of 4 lanes} because you’re likely going a bit slower than everyone else. The speed limit is 55. It is easy to imagine that we all engage in this criminal behavior because it’s what everyone else is doing, and who knows how it got started.
In the Harvard situation, assuming that the cheating took place, you can easily imagine some student saying to another student “I heard Jeremy, Suzanne, Erica, and Michael are working together on this take home test.” And that rumor spreading. If the four students are considered leading students, you can imagine the competitive environment causing others to follow, just as we follow the general speed on the highway. But if there was a way to catch all of us, we might get hefty speeding tickets. You take your chances.
I have to concur with @benjaminjoffe. Very often, tests are designed to be easy to grade, how well a student can memorize, or (in the case of take-home tests) force the student to read the text and assigned readings in order find the correct answer to the questions. If the test is the later, it’s not really a “test” but a homework assignment.
We live in a country where refrigerators carry tags asking the buyer to not lift them on his/her back and coffee shops have to bend backwords to make sure clients know that hot coffee should be sipped with caution. Thus, it may be possible that students in a top university, with a tradition of hundreds of years, may not know what “take home assignments” are. Possible, but not probable.
Unfortunately, a few (or more than a few) of said students have top lawyers in their families’ retinue. They will not be censured.
The instructions do seem contradictory, since making a test “open book, open internet” and then telling students not to “discuss” the exam with “others” doesn’t make much sense, especially in a world in which students interact by means of the internet constantly.
Also, if some of the help was coming from the TA’s (or TF’s as they are apparently called at Harvard), then the blame falls on the professor for not overseeing what his TA’s were doing. TA’s are employed by the university to assist the professor, and if they were giving the same responses to whole groups of students, that could be how students legitimately got matching answers.
It sounds like this prof was taking the easy way out all along, and then suddenly changed the terms of his test. In today’s world, a take-home test is a silly idea, and the fact that he just woke up to this doesn’t bode well for him. (I am 60 years old and a community college professor, so my sympathy for the students is not based on anything but the facts in the case.)
Contributory negligence.
As a student, I’d guess the test wasn’t designed to test intelligence, But designed to test recollection of facts, which is far to easy to cheat on. And who cares about memorizing facts anyway? I’ve taken several courses in which i read and studied the entire textbook and still did poorly on the test. Not because I’m unintelligent our a poor test-taker, but because the portion of the class covered on the test want what captivated my interest. For example, history of economics 400 level course: i read 1000s of pages and was fascinated by the reading. however, i neglected to memorize the professors power point slides and didn’t pass his tests, which necessarily covered a TINY portion of the material covered because it had to be reproduced within an hour.
I feel I’m one of the few students who strived to LEARN. Everyone else just cared about passing the tests, and usually you don’t even need a textbook to accomplish that. So…
A new and improved test:
Students must write essays on any portion of the class that interests them. Problem solved. teachers can read their work and decide based on TALKING TO STUDENTS, rather than judging them through a scan tron or standardized test, their grade. Maybe this wheel move education away from grade based and towards learning based. Who cares what grades you get? Its about what you learn. Make school about learning again and not about grades and you won’t have cheating.
What are the odds that Obama’s people will try to cheat to win the upcoming elections ?? No voter ID ?? Illegal immigrants (millions of them voting ??)
The Republicans buy judges, not voters. Remember Florida?
This has been repeatedly asserted but every investigation by Republicans to prove it has found fewer that five to no actual cases. It turns out that getting people to vote at all is difficult, and illegal immigrants are in no way willing to expose themselves. If you have proof, bring it to the authorities so that it can be investigated. We’d like to know the facts rather than your fears or your guesses at the odds or even our own. Thx.
Make school about learning again and not about grades and you won’t have cheating. It won’t be standardized, it won’t be “fair.”
Kids just want to pass, get good grades. They don’t care about learning because they’re not taught that leaning is the goal. Their lives are filled with “you need to get good grades, so you can go to college” instead of “learn something, anything you want, specialize in it, become the best in your niche and you will prosper, the world will prosper”
“predictably irrational” was required reading in “history of economic thought 435.” I don’t know why. I read the classics from Smith up to Freidman on my own. I suppose someday I’ll say smith up to ariely, but you’re definitely not history yet: you’re very much alive and prospering. It makes me happy to think of how much knowledge you spread. Thanks, Brian Faith
I have a question: Suppose one student set a web forum “Introduction to Congress – Harvard” and opened a discussion about the tests (and possibly other issues of the class). Then students (and possibly other people) entered the forum under anonymous aliases. Would that still be considered cheating? Legally? Morally? I feel there are inherent contradictions in doing an exam ‘open internet’ but not ‘open discussion’.
Furthermore, the real environment the students face is not the one described by the exam. They don’t know exactly what the professor expects of them, and they know that legal and strategic constraints prevent him from saying what he really wants (suppose, for example, that the professor thinks it is okay to discuss the exam and share ideas, but not to give other people your answers. Could he write this in the exam? What power of enforcement could he have to prevent the second if allowing the first? The difference is not verifiable).
So the students behave like rational actors and update their beliefs about what the professor really expects from other signals he sends and from the behavior of TA’s (which supposedly act with professor consent). And in this case, all the signals (TA’s helping, being ‘open internet’, the professor stating ‘his class was easy’) pointed to the belief that it was considered okay by the professor to discuss some issues about the exam – exactly as in my example above. And so the students rationally followed this belief. I assume the professor is not an economist, otherwise he would have noticed this fact.
I am amazed at the number of people in this forum condoning cheating at one of our highest institutions of learning. Most new they were cheating. Do they do this kind of thing in their other classes? When is it ever ok to share and discuss test questions before taking the test? If it was allowed to share and discuss test questions what is the purpose of the test? These people will unfortunately be our future leaders, governors, congressmen,ceo’s etc. If the Institution does not take severe measures many will doubt the veracity of that schools degree’s. How many times has this happened in the past? Is it still going on? I see alot of blame foisted upon the teacher and the TA’s and not alot of looking at the motivations and responsiblity of the students. Sad indeed.
One could equally ask, if it is allowed to use the textbook and the internet, what is the purpose of the test? If they are allowed to talk to the TA, why would it be disallowed to talk to each other? I am opposed to cheating as much as anybody, and I regularly report my students for plagiarism. But the instructions for this test were ambiguous and confusing, and I believe the students when they say that they truly did not know that they were cheating.
I agree. When students are asked to use open book and open internet the objective is to see how they think and then express those thoughts. Students at all academic institutions know the policy around plaigerism and students of this venerated institution should not need that reiterated any time a test is provided. Perhaps we need to ensure that students sign off on Dan’s “honor code” to remind them. Sadly the future leaders of the country seem happy to cheat a little. The real question is if there is no consequence because some including the perpetrators want to rationalize this away then what foundry will be rationalise away tomorrow?
(One of) The truth is, our highest institutions of learning today are not the same as they used to be. No matter how much it wants to keep its status, it is not possible due to the state of the educational system of today. I substitute in elementary, middle and high school and I am appalled at how all students seem to be oblivious to what’s being taught, not to mention how moronic a lot of the teachers are. It makes me want to pull my hair out. My school district is considered the best in our city, yet our students still cannot subtract in 5th grade. It’s something to cry about. These are the kids who will be in these prestigious institutions in a few years. Why expect that they deliver more than they can? This is not condoning cheating but thinking about reasons it happens.
Professor makes a take home test “open internet” and is then surprised that many answers are the same? This case is a poor one, and we cannot learn much about student cheating from it.
Joe Brady, 20 year instructor
University of Delaware
In the business world, collaboration and reuse are important. You cannot succeed on your own and need to take credit for your teamwork and your part in producing the result. What is cheating is outlined in Scott Adams Dilbert book, “The Way of the Weasel” where you get others to do your work and take credit for it. That’s what I see is the issue here. Are people taking credit for other’s work, say, without attribution.
On another front, the issue of white lies was raised as an example. Let’s be clear that we have a right to privacy. Others do not have a right to work the truth out of us, such as by asking us loaded questions. In those cases, we have a duty if not an obligation to lie to protect our privacy. Where people have a right to the information, such as our employers about their business matters, then our duty is to the truth. So if a friend asks us about a test question but not for the answer, we should help however we can. If that friend asks us about the answer rather than the question, then the moral choice is to lie if we need to and say we aren’t ready to work on that yet. That will help them stay moral while also everybody saves face. All personal honesty is not being necessarily moral or desirable.
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Through-out the world, political leaderships have been accused of bribery and cheating. It’s not astonishing at all, the tale of Havard! The generations are being molded in such an ironic way, that the youth are at a disadvantage!
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