https://www.techspot.com/news/113049-professor-chart-exposes-scale-ai-cheating-college-exams.html
However, Serrano soon noticed signs that something was amiss. When 86 students signed up for his welfare economics course that semester, compared to the usual 30, he suspected that many had taken it because he allowed take-home exams, providing them the opportunity to use ChatGPT or similar AI tools.
The professor's suspicions were just about confirmed when the midterm scores averaged 96%. This was far above the typical range of 65% to 80% despite Serrano's efforts to make the test more difficult to account for the students' unlimited time.
He gave a take-home midterm exam, and the ave. score was 96 percent. He gave an in-person final exam, and the scores ranged from 65 to 80 percent.
The implication is that teachers will now have to use more class time for in-person exams, handwritten drafts for papers, etc., plus do things like oral reports with almost no notes allowed, seminar-type classes, and so on in order to limit the use of AI (and probably even computers and similar devices connected to the 'net) for cheating.
Submitted July 12, 2026 at 06:45AM by FickleApartment2151 https://ift.tt/fEbOq7M