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Cheating can take the form of crib notes, looking over
someone's shoulder during an exam, or any forbidden
sharing of information between students regarding an
exam or exercise. Many elaborate methods of cheating
have been developed over the years. For instance,
students have been documented hiding notes in the
bathroom toilet tank, in the brims of their baseball
caps, or up their sleeves. Also, the storing of
information in graphing calculators, pagers, cell
phones, and othesr electronic devices has cropped up
since the information revolution began. While students
have long surreptitiously scanned the tests of those
seated near them, some students actively try to aid
those who are trying to cheat. Methods of secretly
signaling the right answer to friends are quite varied,
ranging from coded sneezes or pencil tapping to
high-pitched noises beyond the hearing range of most
teachers. Some students have been known to use more
elaborate means, such as using a system of repetitive
body signals like hand movements or foot jerking to
distribute answers where a tap of the foot could
correspond to answer A, two taps for answer B, and so
on.
Cheating
differs from most other forms of academic dishonesty, in
that people can engage in it without benefiting
themselves academically at all. For example, a student
who illicitly telegraphed answers to a friend during a
test would be cheating, even though the student's own
work is in no way affected. Another example of academic
dishonesty is a dialogue between students in the same
class but in two different time periods, both of which a
test is scheduled for that day. If the student in the
earlier time period informs the other student in the
later period about the test; that is considered academic
dishonesty, even though the first student has not
benefitted himself. This form of cheating though
deprecated could conceivably be called altruistic. |