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Is this cheating as insane in my school as it is in yours. Its literally out of hand. I am just wondering is there hardcore cheating in medical school too ( I have feeling there probably is) ? 

For the undergrads, you'll have it occasionally...
But among the graduate students (overwhelming majority from China or India)...ugh. It sucks to see them get similar results as the people who actually deserved it.
The cheating in my physics (for sci. and eng.) class was rampant. We were not allowed any formulas/notes. We were, however, allowed a TI-83 level calculator or higher. People just put all their notes in their calc.
At my school, we had a situation with our "clickers" a few years ago (clickers = a small touch-pad remote, that the prof uses to ask you multiple-choice questions; you send which letter you think is the answer, and it usually counts as a small percent of your grade). I was in the morning lecture, and the people in my class would send the answers for the clicker questions to the afternoon lecture. Technically, this is cheating, and my professor eventually caught on. He changed around the answer for each lecture, and tested how many people put the answer that was correct in the morning lectures' clickers. Those people were charged with academic dishonesty, but I believe that they reduced the penalty and just had everyone write an essay to get it removed from their records (since he charged around 80 people with it).
I caught a girl cheating on an exam for an upper division bio class. A year later, me and a few other TA's that proctored that same exam decided to look her up on face book, ***** was in medschool!
We use clickers here at UCI and I'm familiar with the mechanics. The situation you described above sounds rather fabricated considering by chance alone individuals may input any of the answer choices and you can't really hold someone accountable for guessing wrong.
One common way to cheat with clickers that I've seen happen is lending your clicker to a friend who doesn't come to class so they still get the points for not being there and having the friend click for them.
That's exactly why so many people were frustrated with it, and why the Academic Judiciary allowed for it to be removed by writing a simple essay. On one hand, you cannot prove who cheated and who didn't, because it's real easy to just guess an letter-choice when you don't know the answer. But on the other hand, my professor knew that there was a large majority of the people in the other class cheating. It wasn't a coincidence that 90% of the afternoon class got the clicker question right. In the end, the professor can choose what he wants to do. Academic dishonesty is a big deal, so the only reason that the Academic Judiciary was a little bit more lenient about it was because you really couldn't prove who cheated or not.
I don't mind the clickers at all. For the most part the clickers allow for a real-time assessment of the material which sometimes can allow professors to witness first-hand if they are moving too fast through the material by placing multiple choice questions throughout the lecture. However, I don't agree with giving points for participating and/or answering correctly because that is not the purpose.
I'm under the impression they simply give meager points for participating or answering correctly because students won't have an incentive to dish out the 30-40 bucks for it. It's a stupid system that hopefully in the future they will just install buttons on each seat rather than requiring students to purchase it for a few classes and giving the incentive of 5% of the total class grade.
Cheating is like an epidemic at my school. Any class you want to take, all you have to do is let one friend know and he/she will hand over all of their old labs, quizzes and exams. For example, when you take Chemistry 2, assuming your part of some Math/Chem club or any religious club/organization on campus or have a friend who's part of one, you can be sure your 'brothers' and 'sisters' will hook you up exams/labs/quizzes dating all the way back to 1999. And since the profs have been teaching for much longer than that, you could reasonably expect the exam questions to either be EXACTLY the same or a slightly different. And not just one or two people had these exams - well over 95% of the class did. I remember googling the name of one of the kids on the lab reports from 1999 (I was really bored) and I was surprised to find out he's a freakin' dermatologist in Long Island now 😱. And in terms of actual-day-of-the-test cheating, we get ALOTT of that too. One kid who actually studied would tell the professor that they had a conflicting class so they could take the exam in the early morning. Then word would spread like rapid-fire throughout the school about which old tests were similar in test format to the actual thing (i.e. Chem 2 Final Spring 2005 etc.) One of my friends also told me how she uses her huge-a** blackberry to cheat with on MATH EXAMS (I've yet to figure out how she's able to do that and without getting caught)😕😕 And trust me, some of these pre-med kids will cheat their way to school and/or pay for very expensive tutoring and still get 35+ on their MCATs... Its sad but true and I've seen it happen. 🙁
Recieving previous exams or tips from students who have taken it before is something that can't be reasonably monitored very well. Perhaps, this is why at my school Professors openly post up their old exams as a way to keep a level-playing field.
But among the graduate students (overwhelming majority from China or India)...ugh. It sucks to see them get similar results as the people who actually deserved it.
What happened to her during the exam? Did she get reprimanded?
Girl I turned in for cheating in undergrad goes to Harvard Med
Any class where we were allowed to use a graphing calculator also required us to clear the memory on the calculator before the test.
I miss phoenix and tetris so much...
DUH! archive those games so they don't get deleted. I believe its only the RAM and unarchived stuff they can delete? You can also hide the programs and activate them later lol...
Don't judge me ,I don't cheat HONEST
In regards to your question, OP. Cheating is fairly common and outrageous at times! For physics, all the sections have one exam on Friday, people pay others to take the exam for them - they only recently had the rule to bring IDs to exams. Kids even scan their exams, change answers, and submit them for regrading - use the same color markers and everything!
I initially attended Johns Hopkins University as an undergraduate, then studied medicine at the Johns Hopkins Medical School. I was up for a scholarship at the Mayo Clinic, however, during my medical education, I was caught cheating by a co-student named Philip Weber who ultimately got me expelled. I then attended the University of Michigan in order to finish my medical study.
Now I run the department of diagnostic medicine at a very prestigious hospital in New Jersey. 😎
I had a friend in undergrad who got a call from the organic professor in the afternoon after the final exam. The professor said that he had never turned in his final, and accused him of being party to cheating. My friend was shocked, and asked how that made sense, since he would clearly fail if he didn't turn in the final. He came in, and they grilled him for a bit, and he said he would take it again right in the office to prove that he hadn't cheated (he was one of the top students in the class). Eventually they found it that evening, except someone had switched out the cover sheet with his name on it for their own. Apparently that person had been doing it all year, except this time the other cover sheet didn't make it on to another test. The cheater got expelled, and good riddance.
Not to sound racist, but I've noticed the most cheating among international Chinese students in my science classes -- multiple times in my gen chem 1 class, when we were lined up to hand our tests in, I would notice students speaking in Chinese to each other and erasing answers on their bubble sheets. It was so obvious that I was absolutely incredulous that it was never noticed by the TAs.
Not to sound racist, but I've noticed the most cheating among international Chinese students in my science classes -- multiple times in my gen chem 1 class, when we were lined up to hand our tests in, I would notice students speaking in Chinese to each other and erasing answers on their bubble sheets. It was so obvious that I was absolutely incredulous that it was never noticed by the TAs.
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ya rly.
Is this cheating as insane in my school as it is in yours. Its literally out of hand. I am just wondering is there hardcore cheating in medical school too ( I have feeling there probably is) ?![]()
Is this cheating as insane in my school as it is in yours. Its literally out of hand. I am just wondering is there hardcore cheating in medical school too ( I have feeling there probably is) ?![]()