this post was submitted on 15 Jun 2025
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Guardian investigation finds almost 7,000 proven cases of cheating – and experts says these are tip of the iceberg

Thousands of university students in the UK have been caught misusing ChatGPT and other artificial intelligence tools in recent years, while traditional forms of plagiarism show a marked decline, a Guardian investigation can reveal.

A survey of academic integrity violations found almost 7,000 proven cases of cheating using AI tools in 2023-24, equivalent to 5.1 for every 1,000 students. That was up from 1.6 cases per 1,000 in 2022-23.

Figures up to May suggest that number will increase again this year to about 7.5 proven cases per 1,000 students – but recorded cases represent only the tip of the iceberg, according to experts.

The data highlights a rapidly evolving challenge for universities: trying to adapt assessment methods to the advent of technologies such as ChatGPT and other AI-powered writing tools.

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it is a paradigm shift.

what they learn from this is to make sure to not get caught in the future.

[–] Flamekebab@piefed.social 9 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (13 children)

I'm shocked. Shocked! Well, not that shocked.

Ultimately it seems pretty dumb. If you're not going to actually learn while you're there, why bother? University isn't mandatory.

That was actually my biggest disappointment with my degree - the course didn't teach anywhere near enough for my tastes. However I would hope that I was an outlier in that respect!

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[–] monomon@programming.dev 3 points 1 day ago

Oh man the BBC is surely already preparing for Adolescence: rise of the robots

[–] gigachad@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 day ago

Exmatriculation that should be

[–] 30p87@feddit.org 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Should be expelled and banned for life.

At least expelled. But this is sooo damn hard to enforce. I mean, my perspective is from germany, but we also deal with plagiarism by ChatGPT&Co sometimes, especially in Bachelors or Master Theses. I never saw a student in expelled for any form of plagiarism in my three years at the university. Worst case was always that he or she failed the thesis or course, because the university is so damn afraid of any lawsuit that maybe could occur.

[–] Eheran@lemmy.world 0 points 1 day ago (2 children)

The output is often really good, even for STEM questions about niche topics.

[–] sm1dger@lemmy.world 2 points 20 hours ago* (last edited 20 hours ago) (1 children)

Not always. I teach a module where my lectures are fully coursework assessed and my god, a lot of the submissions are clearly AI. It's super hard to prove though and I just mark the same as any other, but half-halluvinated school-grade garbage scores pretty damn low.

(edit: this is because we are trained on how to write questions AI struggles with. It makes writing exams harder, but it is possible. AI is terrible at chemistry. My personal favourite being when Google AI told me the melting point of pyrrole was about -2000C, so colder than absolute zero)

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Bold move voicing such an opinion on Lemmy! (I agree with you, and you are also objectively correct. There are also many things it is terrible at, but if one knows what one is doing, that really doesn’t detract from the quality stuff)

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