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427 points JumpCrisscross | 1 comments | | HN request time: 1.06s | source
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skhunted ◴[] No.41904004[source]
I’ve been teaching in higher education for 30 years and am soon retiring. I teach math. In every math course there is massive amounts of cheating on everything that is graded that is not proctored in a classroom setting. Locking down browsers and whatnot does not prevent cheating.

The only solution is to require face-to-face proctored exams and not allow students to use technology of any kind while taking the test. But any teacher doing this will end up with no students signing up for their class. The only solution I see is the Higher Learning Commission mandating this for all classes.

But even requiring in person proctored exams is not the full solution. Students are not used to doing the necessary work to learn. They are used to doing the necessary work to pass. And that work is increasingly cheating. It’s a clusterfuck. I have calculus students who don’t know how to work with fractions. If we did truly devise a system that prevents cheating we’ll see that a very high percentage of current college students are not ready to be truly college educated.

K-12 needs to be changed as well.

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fallingknife ◴[] No.41904929[source]
They dumbed down college degrees so that everyone can get one. What did you expect? Can't do that without lowering standards.
replies(1): >>41906110 #
amanaplanacanal ◴[] No.41906110[source]
We are now several generations in on telling people the way to get a good job is to get a college degree. So everybody is there to get the piece of paper, not to actually learn things they are interested in.
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1. commandlinefan ◴[] No.41906909[source]
Since it costs $50-$200,000 per year, I wouldn't really expect many people to go there just because they were "interested".