←back to thread

222 points dougb5 | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
djoldman ◴[] No.45132499[source]
Unfortunately, this kind of story will continue to be a popular one in newspapers and magazines, garnering lots of clicks. It feeds into the "everything is different now" sort of desperate helplessness people seem primed to adopt with respect to AI sometimes.

Obviously the answer to testing and grading is to do it in the classroom. If a computer is required, it can't connect to the internet.

Caught with a cellphone, you fail the test. Caught twice you fail the class.

The non-story beatings will continue until morale and common sense improve.

replies(12): >>45132650 #>>45132800 #>>45132869 #>>45133599 #>>45133628 #>>45134310 #>>45134864 #>>45135534 #>>45135973 #>>45137815 #>>45140801 #>>45145262 #
ethbr1 ◴[] No.45132869[source]
If substantially changing school device and testing policies is required by new technology, doesn't that mean everything is different now?
replies(1): >>45133060 #
chrisco255 ◴[] No.45133060[source]
As far as I can remember phones were not allowed in class and testing was generally done on paper. College was a lot more lax about this stuff than K-12 was. But colleges could and should proctor their exams more strictly.
replies(1): >>45133118 #
ethbr1 ◴[] No.45133118[source]
No phones in class, at scale and enforced, feels like a last 5 years thing in K-12. And the trend was very much towards increased digital testing, pre-LLM.

This is pivoting back to paper-based, but it's going to be as messy and slow of a transition as the no-mobile-device one was.

Especially given how much money there is in "AI".

And hamfistedly-handed, will likely leave another generation fucked over with regards to basic education (like the predatory social+mobile adoption before regulation did previously).

replies(4): >>45133354 #>>45133363 #>>45134259 #>>45144176 #
kevinventullo ◴[] No.45133363[source]
I attended high school in the US in the early 00’s and cell phones were absolutely banned from classrooms. You could keep them in your locker and use them between classes, but that was it.

I attended college in the late 00’s, and I don’t think I took a single digital exam. Quizzes, sure, but for final exams even CS was pencil and paper (or a final project, which admittedly will have issues in the post-LLM era).

replies(2): >>45134008 #>>45134268 #
1. Calavar ◴[] No.45134268[source]
I was also in high school in that time period and had a similar experience. As I recall it, pretty much every student had a phone by 2007ish (flip phones back then), and using a phone in class was grounds to have it confiscated for the day and get a detention. This was absolutely enforced.

My college experience was similar to yours as well. All exams were paper (often blue books). Having a phone out would get you kicked out of the exam hall. But by the time I did med school, it was all digital.