I love how accepted people change their status on sdn to "medical student" without having sit through one class in medical school, just sayin
a classmate messing up a class google doc study guide with wrong answers, etc.
a classmate messing up a class google doc study guide with wrong answers
wow this is pretty malignant
I love how accepted people change their status on sdn to "medical student" without having sit through one class in medical school, just sayin
I love how accepted people change their status on sdn to "medical student" without having sit through one class in medical school, just sayin
I love how med students change their SDN status to 'resident' on match day without even having been on call once.
People are excited, chill out.
Please tell me you have better things to do with your life than keep track of people's SDN ...
Getting ready to start med school in the fall and just curious how frequent people cheat (if at all) at your school?
I feel like it would take some big balls, but I know a ton of people in undergrad who did, although most got caught. =]
This issue
One of my classmates was found cheating on a test toward the end of 2nd year. He had to repeat 2nd year.
is moot in this thread. OP, who openly admitted that he is starting this fall, asked a question from his soon-to-be-fellow classmates about cheating...he wasn't giving advice.
And unless mods start requiring some sort of proof of status and we can ensure that everyone on here only gives advice about things they have actually experienced, we'll all just have to contend that this is *just* an online forum on the interwebs.
I love how med students change their SDN status to 'resident' on match day without even having been on call once.
People are excited, chill out.
My school makes it hard/almost impossible to cheat on our big exams during M1/M2. We took all of our exams on our own computers in a lecture hall together with some kind of "military grade" program that we were told was unhackable.
I have always wondered what other schools take block exams with. Paper exams? Scantrons?
I can't say I have ever seen anyone do this.
I've heard of people at my school who would go to the bathroom during an exam and look up answers on their phones as our school's test policy is pretty much on honor code. I would personally never do that, although the thought has crossed my mind. Other people abused the "lol I'm sick AKA I don't want to take this test then have my friends feed me answers when I take it in 2 days" shpiel. I missed one exam during the first 2 years b/c I just completely overslept, and I took it in the afternoon the same day without talking to any of my classmates.
Getting ready to start med school in the fall and just curious how frequent people cheat (if at all) at your school?
I feel like it would take some big balls, but I know a ton of people in undergrad who did, although most got caught. =]
Cheating on tests? I haven't seen it and I imagine, like RandomHero, said it just isn't worth risking expulsion for a couple answers on one test.
Cheating on things that are less likely to get you caught happens though. Like having friends sign you in at a required class, passing around old tests that you aren't supposed to, a classmate messing up a class google doc study guide with wrong answers, etc. I've seen those kind of things happen.
No one cheats in medical school. The risk is too big. In my school there's no doubt in my mind that cheating of any kind would lead to immediate expulsion.
Our anatomy professor would tag the bodies late at nigh & then lock all doors & disable the card access to the lab. When asked why he didn't just tag them earlier in the day, he told us that in his previous school, some students had gone into the labs THROUGH THE VENTS & photographed the tags
We had someone do this as well. They got called out pretty badly in a full classroom
You can't really believe that? Our anatomy professor would tag the bodies late at nigh & then lock all doors & disable the card access to the lab. When asked why he didn't just tag them earlier in the day, he told us that in his previous school, some students had gone into the labs THROUGH THE VENTS & photographed the tags
Most people who get into medical school have been fairly, if not outstandingly, successful in undergrad & when faced with not doing well for the first time in their lives, it is easy to see why panic & irrational thoughts take over
Whoa!! Thats cheating dedication right there. How did he even find out about that?
Student got stuck in the duct?
Not a good idea to be cheating through a duct when weighing 300 lbs lol.
I guess I meant to say no one that I know of. I've never seen it happen.
There have been cases where people have moved pins during the anatomy practical and I fell victim to that twice lol but I've never seen or heard of anyone in my class blatantly cheating on a written exam.
Student got stuck in the duct?
Not a good idea to be cheating through a duct when weighing 300 lbs lol.
You can't really believe that? Our anatomy professor would tag the bodies late at nigh & then lock all doors & disable the card access to the lab. When asked why he didn't just tag them earlier in the day, he told us that in his previous school, some students had gone into the labs THROUGH THE VENTS & photographed the tags
Getting ready to start med school in the fall and just curious how frequent people cheat (if at all) at your school?
I feel like it would take some big balls, but I know a ton of people in undergrad who did, although most got caught. =]
I don't know anyone who cheats. It would be too hard and the risk isn't worth it. Plus, our tests have 80-100 questions usually so I don't see how a cheat sheet would help very much.
I don't know of anyone who has nor do I know anyone who has come before the honor code committee about it.

Cheating on tests? I haven't seen it and I imagine, like RandomHero, said it just isn't worth risking expulsion for a couple answers on one test.
Cheating on things that are less likely to get you caught happens though. Like having friends sign you in at a required class, passing around old tests that you aren't supposed to, a classmate messing up a class google doc study guide with wrong answers, etc. I've seen those kind of things happen.
We had someone do this as well. They got called out pretty badly in a full classroom
You can't really believe that? Our anatomy professor would tag the bodies late at nigh & then lock all doors & disable the card access to the lab. When asked why he didn't just tag them earlier in the day, he told us that in his previous school, some students had gone into the labs THROUGH THE VENTS & photographed the tags
Most people who get into medical school have been fairly, if not outstandingly, successful in undergrad & when faced with not doing well for the first time in their lives, it is easy to see why panic & irrational thoughts take over
I've heard of people at my school who would go to the bathroom during an exam and look up answers on their phones as our school's test policy is pretty much on honor code.
My school forbids us from leaving the classroom during an exam. If you walk out of the room, you fail. My buddy got ill during one exam and knew he had to vomit.
He stood up and walked toward the door and the proctors told him he wasn't allowed to leave, even to vomit. He busted out the doors anyways... and thankfully they didn't fail him.
My school forbids us from leaving the classroom during an exam. If you walk out of the room, you fail. My buddy got ill during one exam and knew he had to vomit.
He stood up and walked toward the door and the proctors told him he wasn't allowed to leave, even to vomit. He busted out the doors anyways... and thankfully they didn't fail him.
What a bunch of bleeding hearts. He should learn to swallow next time like a man
a classmate messing up a class google doc study guide with wrong answers
That also happened with us. The rule was if any tag came off the whole class got it counted wrong
That's why you throw up the small Asian kid. Bonus - They already have a camera 🙂
We also had the whole "cough once for A, twice for B" etc during short quizzes
He should have just vomited in a trash can next to the proctor and then returned to his seat.
But seriously, not being able to use the restroom during an exam? That seems rather extreme.
A group of first year students were caught signing in for one another in a manditory class. Their punishment was to repeat the entire class during their second year. Its a full-year class with at least 3 hours of required class and lab each week!
We had an optional cardiology final that contained the same questions from the first two exams. The professor found out that a group of students were planning on going to the second test review session to memorize all the answers for the final. The professor got super mad and sent out an email to the class threatening to cancel the exam review and ask for those students to be turned in. I dont beleive they were ever caught, but they did end up holding the exam review because she felt it would be a disservice to the honest students if she cancelled.
We have week-long practical exams and students tell other students what is on them. One student posted on another students facebook wall what was on the test and obviously got caught.
I bet there are students who get answers/questions from students who have taken the class in prior years, since the professors dont usually change questions from year to year.
One kid got caught hiding a cheat sheet in the bathroom.
I dont cheat, but its certainly possible! I dont think its worth the risk!
Okay I'm not going to lie I know a bunch of students that sign in for their friends for mandatory lectures. I know it's wrong but I didn't know that's considered "cheating".
But seriously, not being able to use the restroom during an exam? That seems rather extreme.
For reals! What about everyone's stress-induced IBS?
Please tell me you have better things to do with your life than keep track of people's SDN status.
As to the cheating...I heard rumors of someone fudging with clinical evals a couple years ago. What a waste of a quarter mil, huh?
Getting ready to start med school in the fall and just curious how frequent people cheat (if at all) at your school?
I feel like it would take some big balls, but I know a ton of people in undergrad who did, although most got caught. =]