US A New Headache for Honest Students: Proving They Didn’t Use A.I.

NY Times - Archive
Students are resorting to extreme measures to fend off accusations of cheating, including hours long screen recordings of their homework sessions.

A few weeks into her sophomore year of college, Leigh Burrell got a notification that made her stomach drop.
She had received a zero on an assignment worth 15 percent of her final grade in a required writing course. In a brief note, her professor explained that he believed she had outsourced the composition of her paper — a mock cover letter — to an A.I. chatbot.
“My heart just freaking stops,” said Ms. Burrell, 23, a computer science major at the University of Houston-Downtown.
But Ms. Burrell’s submission was not, in fact, the instantaneous output of a chatbot. According to Google Docs editing history that was reviewed by The New York Times, she had drafted and revised the assignment over the course of two days. It was flagged anyway by a service offered by the plagiarism-detection company Turnitin that aims to identify text generated by artificial intelligence.

Panicked, Ms. Burrell appealed the decision. Her grade was restored after she sent a 15-page PDF of time-stamped screenshots and notes from her writing process to the chair of her English department.
Still, the episode made her painfully aware of the hazards of being a student — even an honest one — in an academic landscape distorted by A.I. cheating.
Generative A.I. tools including ChatGPT are reshaping education for the students who use them to cut corners. According to a Pew Research survey conducted last year, 26 percent of teenagers said they had used ChatGPT for schoolwork, double the rate of the previous year. Student use of A.I. chatbots to compose essays and solve coding problems has sent teachers scrambling for solutions.
But the specter of A.I. misuse, and the imperfect systems used to root it out, may also be affecting students who are following the rules. In interviews, high school, college and graduate students described persistent anxiety about being accused of using A.I. on work they had completed themselves — and facing potentially devastating academic consequences.
In response, many students have imposed methods of self-surveillance that they say feel more like self-preservation. Some record their screens for hours at a time as they do their schoolwork. Others make a point of composing class papers using only word processors that track their keystrokes closely enough to produce a detailed edit history.

The next time Ms. Burrell had to submit an assignment for the class in which she had been accused of using A.I., she uploaded a 93-minute YouTube video documenting her writing process. It was annoying, she said, but necessary for her peace of mind.
“I was so frustrated and paranoid that my grade was going to suffer because of something I didn’t do,” she said.

These students’ fears are borne out by research reported in The Washington Post and Bloomberg Businessweek indicating that A.I.-detection software, a booming industry in recent years, often misidentifies work as A.I.-generated.
A new study of a dozen A.I.-detection services by researchers at the University of Maryland found that they had erroneously flagged human-written text as A.I.-generated about 6.8 percent of the time, on average.
“At least from our analysis, current detectors are not ready to be used in practice in schools to detect A.I. plagiarism,” said Soheil Feizi, an author of the paper and an associate professor of computer science at Maryland.

Turnitin, which was not included in the analysis, said in 2023 that its software mistakenly flagged human-written sentences about 4 percent of the time. A detection program from OpenAI that had a 9 percent false-positive rate, according to the company, was discontinued after six months.
Turnitin did not respond to requests for comment for this article, but has said that its scores should not be used as the sole determinant of A.I. misuse.
“We cannot mitigate the risk of false positives completely given the nature of A.I. writing and analysis, so, it is important that educators use the A.I. score to start a meaningful and impactful dialogue with their students in such instances,” Annie Chechitelli, Turnitin’s chief product officer, wrote in a 2023 blog post.
Some students are mobilizing against the use of A.I.-detection tools, arguing that the risk of penalizing innocent students is too great. More than 1,000 people have signed an online petition started by Kelsey Auman last month, one of the first of its kind, that calls on the University at Buffalo to disable its A.I.-detection service.
A month before her graduation from the university’s master of public health program, Ms. Auman was told by a professor that three of her assignments had been flagged by Turnitin. She reached out to other members of the 20-person course, and five told her that they had received similar messages, she recalled in a recent interview. Two said that their graduations had been delayed.
Ms. Auman, 29, was terrified she would not graduate. She had finished her undergraduate studies well before ChatGPT arrived on campuses, and it had never occurred to her to stockpile evidence in case she was accused of cheating using generative A.I.

“You just assume that if you do your work, you’re going to be fine — until you aren’t,” she said.

Ms. Auman said she was concerned that A.I.-detection software would punish students whose writing fell outside “algorithmic norms” for reasons that had nothing to do with artificial intelligence. In a 2023 study, Stanford University researchers found that A.I.-detection services were more likely to misclassify the work of students who were not native English speakers. (Turnitin has disputed those findings.)
After Ms. Auman met with her professor and exchanged lengthy emails with the school’s Office of Academic Integrity, she was notified that she would graduate as planned, without any charges of academic dishonesty.
“I’m just really glad I’m graduating,” she said. “I can’t imagine living in this feeling of fear for the rest of my academic career.”
John Della Contrada, a spokesman for the University at Buffalo, said that the school was not considering discontinuing its use of Turnitin’s A.I.-detection service in response to the petition.
“To ensure fairness, the university does not rely solely on A.I.-detection software when adjudicating cases of alleged academic dishonesty,” he wrote in an email, adding that the university guaranteed due process for accused students, a right to appeal and remediation options for first-time offenders. (Ms. Burrell’s school, the University of Houston-Downtown, warns faculty members that plagiarism detectors including Turnitin “are inconsistent and can easily be misused,” but still makes them available.)
Other schools have determined that detection software is more trouble than it is worth: The University of California, Berkeley; Vanderbilt; and Georgetown have all cited reliability concerns in their decisions to disable Turnitin’s A.I.-detection feature.

“While we recognize that A.I. detection may give some instructors peace of mind, we’ve noticed that overreliance on technology can damage a student-and-instructor relationship more than it can help it,” Jenae Cohn, executive director of the Center for Teaching and Learning at U.C. Berkeley, wrote in an email.

Sydney Gill, an 18-year-old high school senior in San Francisco, said she appreciated that teachers were in an extremely difficult position when it came to navigating an academic environment jumbled by A.I. She added that she had second-guessed her writing ever since an essay she entered in a writing competition in late 2023 was wrongly marked as A.I.-generated.
That anxiety persisted as she wrote college application essays this year. “I don’t want to say it’s life-changing, but it definitely altered how I approach all of my writing in the future,” she said.
In 2023, Kathryn Mayo, a professor at Cosumnes River College in Sacramento, started using A.I.-detection tools from Copyleaks and Scribbr on essays from students in her photo-history and photo-theory classes. She was relieved, at first, to find what she hoped would be a straightforward fix in a complex and frustrating moment for teachers.
Then she ran some of her own writing through the service, and was notified that it had been partly generated using A.I. “I was so embarrassed,” she said.

She has since changed some of her assignment prompts to make them more personal, which she hopes will make them harder for students to outsource to ChatGPT. She tries to engage any student whom she seriously suspects of misusing A.I. in a gentle conversation about the writing process.
Sometimes students sheepishly admit to cheating, she said. Other times, they just drop the class.
 
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From today onward, all assignments must have the word NIGGER as a header, and the word NIGGER must also be hidden at least 15 times in the presentation, as AI is not allowed to write the word NIGGER.

As an actual solution, make all the important assignments and tests into a live presentation. No printed shit, all handwritten. The point shouldn't be to forbid AI from being used but to make it so much of a hassle that studying is just easier.
Or Bryan Lunduke, I heard Cuck GPT cant say that
 
This college is giving 15 percent of a sophomore class grade for writing a cover letter. It still takes students 2 days to write it.

College is a scam and full of worthless idiots. The professor should be banned from teaching for money, the college should be shut down and turned into a high school, and the dumb bitch in this article should go work at Walmart.
OP forgot to include the pictures in the article.

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“I was so frustrated and paranoid that my grade was going to suffer because of something I didn’t do,” said Leigh Burrell, who was given a zero on an important assignment because of her professor’s suspicions that she had used A.I. to complete it. In her appeal of the decision, she pulled out all the stops. Hope Mora for The New York Times


Roughly an hour of Ms. Burrell’s work on a computer programming assignment, compressed to 17 seconds. To guard against accusations of A.I. use, she uploaded a screen-recorded video to YouTube that shows her writing process unspooling in real time.

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Ms. Burrell’s grade was restored after she sent a 15-page PDF featuring time-stamped screenshots to the chair of the University of Houston-Downtown’s English department. Elsewhere, students have begun to mobilize against the use of faulty A.I.-detection programs. Hope Mora for The New York Times

Note that the essay in the video is NOT a cover letter but rather an essay about C++ that sounds EXACTLY like what you'd get from ChatGPT.

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OP forgot to include the pictures in the article.

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“I was so frustrated and paranoid that my grade was going to suffer because of something I didn’t do,” said Leigh Burrell, who was given a zero on an important assignment because of her professor’s suspicions that she had used A.I. to complete it. In her appeal of the decision, she pulled out all the stops. Hope Mora for The New York Times

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Roughly an hour of Ms. Burrell’s work on a computer programming assignment, compressed to 17 seconds. To guard against accusations of A.I. use, she uploaded a screen-recorded video to YouTube that shows her writing process unspooling in real time.

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Ms. Burrell’s grade was restored after she sent a 15-page PDF featuring time-stamped screenshots to the chair of the University of Houston-Downtown’s English department. Elsewhere, students have begun to mobilize against the use of faulty A.I.-detection programs. Hope Mora for The New York Times

Note that the essay in the video is NOT a cover letter but rather a essay about C++ that sounds EXACTLY like what you'd get from ChatGPT.

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Sheeeiit we wuz computah an sheeiit.
 
Let me guess.
Just like everything else, retards and groids are going to abuse a nice thing that I like to use so that I can’t even use it properly until said retards and groids whine enough that we’ll all be allowed to use it again.
Same thing happened with Wikipedia, calculators, Cliffnotes, whatever. Verboten until it’s discovered literally all the Mexicans didn’t do any schoolwork, then it becomes SOP.
 
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This is insane. It’s the kind of excercise you should sit down and be able to knock out in 15-30 mins absolute tops. In front of someone, using pen and paper.
It’s not on the students to prove they didn’t cheat. It’s up to the academics to set up a system where students can produce work without accusation. If that’s in person and with pen and paper so be it, but if you accuse me of cheating, the onus is on YOU to prove it.
Students these days can barely read. Writing a cover letter is a real challenge for them.
 
OP forgot to include the pictures in the article.


View attachment 7383436
Roughly an hour of Ms. Burrell’s work on a computer programming assignment, compressed to 17 seconds. To guard against accusations of A.I. use, she uploaded a screen-recorded video to YouTube.

Note that the essay in the video is NOT a cover letter but rather an essay about C++ that sounds EXACTLY like what you'd get from ChatGPT.

She left in the tabs with her recording about how incrementing worked and what looks like "C++ for D(ummies?)" on Reddit...
 
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OP forgot to include the pictures in the article.

View attachment 7383434
“I was so frustrated and paranoid that my grade was going to suffer because of something I didn’t do,” said Leigh Burrell, who was given a zero on an important assignment because of her professor’s suspicions that she had used A.I. to complete it. In her appeal of the decision, she pulled out all the stops. Hope Mora for The New York Times

View attachment 7383436
Roughly an hour of Ms. Burrell’s work on a computer programming assignment, compressed to 17 seconds. To guard against accusations of A.I. use, she uploaded a screen-recorded video to YouTube that shows her writing process unspooling in real time.

View attachment 7383437
Ms. Burrell’s grade was restored after she sent a 15-page PDF featuring time-stamped screenshots to the chair of the University of Houston-Downtown’s English department. Elsewhere, students have begun to mobilize against the use of faulty A.I.-detection programs. Hope Mora for The New York Times

Note that the essay in the video is NOT a cover letter but rather an essay about C++ that sounds EXACTLY like what you'd get from ChatGPT.

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Holy fuck this grown-ass woman is borderline illiterate. They allow this standard of writing in universities in the fucking computer science department? What the fuck is this bitch trying to do? She's wasting the time of a longstanding community of autists that actually want to build IC designs and test semiconducting materials. They don't need whatever she's trying to prove. This is Lissa Explains it All for C++ and she should feel bad. And the school should feel bad too, for having whatever you call this imitation of a faculty of sciences.
 
This is insane. It’s the kind of excercise you should sit down and be able to knock out in 15-30 mins absolute tops. In front of someone, using pen and paper.
It’s not on the students to prove they didn’t cheat. It’s up to the academics to set up a system where students can produce work without accusation. If that’s in person and with pen and paper so be it, but if you accuse me of cheating, the onus is on YOU to prove it.
There are some days, when I've been looking for work, where I've written probably a dozen at least unique cover letters in a single day all tailored to whatever specific job I was applying for. I'm pretty sure learning to write a cover letter is something I was taught in high school, probably when I was 15 or 16. Why is this even a college assignment at all?
 
From today onward, all assignments must have the word NIGGER as a header, and the word NIGGER must also be hidden at least 15 times in the presentation, as AI is not allowed to write the word NIGGER.

As an actual solution, make all the important assignments and tests into a live presentation. No printed shit, all handwritten. The point shouldn't be to forbid AI from being used but to make it so much of a hassle that studying is just easier.
It's just too much work for not enough compensation. Your typical junior college lecturer is going to spend 20-25 hours a week lecturing, another 15 in office doing clerical shit, physically preparing tests/assignments, organizing and uploading class materials and doing the grading they can get done on the clock. Then they'll go home (Does your department have several campus locations? Enjoy the commute) and do what they didn't have time to do at night, and now we're talking about having them do all that and also individually organize and proctor 150 individual live sessions to make sure that their students are actually producing that mountain of tripe that they have to go through. There's not enough time in the world, and if there was, I wouldn't sell it for $40k a year. I'm sure at that point many of them would rather take that masters degree down to the liquor store and make more money clerking and being able to actually leave work at work when they go home at night. The nigger-sieve suggestion is honestly better.
 
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OP forgot to include the pictures in the article.

View attachment 7383434
“I was so frustrated and paranoid that my grade was going to suffer because of something I didn’t do,” said Leigh Burrell, who was given a zero on an important assignment because of her professor’s suspicions that she had used A.I. to complete it. In her appeal of the decision, she pulled out all the stops. Hope Mora for The New York Times

View attachment 7383436
Roughly an hour of Ms. Burrell’s work on a computer programming assignment, compressed to 17 seconds. To guard against accusations of A.I. use, she uploaded a screen-recorded video to YouTube that shows her writing process unspooling in real time.

View attachment 7383437
Ms. Burrell’s grade was restored after she sent a 15-page PDF featuring time-stamped screenshots to the chair of the University of Houston-Downtown’s English department. Elsewhere, students have begun to mobilize against the use of faulty A.I.-detection programs. Hope Mora for The New York Times

Note that the essay in the video is NOT a cover letter but rather an essay about C++ that sounds EXACTLY like what you'd get from ChatGPT.

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Upon watching that video she submitted and looking at those screenshots i'm absolutely convinced she did in fact cheat and use an AI tool to write that. and i'm saying that as a programmer. Case in point:

int myNum; (insert pic here)
Variables are important for establishing blahblahblah


Nigger what? The fuck did I just read? Insert pic here? Gibberish about variables? None of that shit makes any sense. That is basic, literally day one stuff. Nobody who understands even the most basic concepts behind writing even a simple program, nor how variables work, is going to put that nonsense into an assignment. That absolutely screams it was written by some kind of AI, by someone who either didn't bother to actually review what the AI program had generated before submitting it or who did and who does not understand enough about the material and concepts the assignment was about to recognize the bizarre and blatantly obvious completely nonsensical fuckups. The instructor absolutely knows this was generated by AI and that she does not understand the material at all

As for her video that provides supposed proof that she did in fact write it herself? It proves nothing of the sort, except that she didn't think this through and isn't as clever as she thinks she is. I will tell you exactly how she did this to try to make it look legit: she absolutely did record herself writing the assignment. per the video proof of doing such. But she absolutely had a second laptop or PC going off to the side that she used to generate it with an AI tool before she started and was copying that verbatim to make it look legit. This explains the obvious bizarre shit and shows that she clearly didn't understand the material because she didn't catch what should have been glaringly obvious, even to an absolute shit tier programmer. Its also quite clear from the way the whole thing is worded that it was written by an AI tool. Nobody writes like that. Its very mechanical and paced very strangely. Plus there are nonsensical phrases and grammatical issues that a human wouldn't make. Case in point: Think of it like (give a very simple comparison) There are several types of variables in C++ That was absolutely NOT written by a human. That was written by an AI with shit put in there to alert the person generating the writeup where they are supposed to put examples. She does this multiple times with those (insert example here) sections

Also, as somebody who has used both, going out of your way to differentiate between VS and CS Code is a really bizarre thing to do. For the most part you can do what you need to with either one. VS Code is more than a rich text editor as well. Also slay queen tutorial.sln speaks for itself

She's hoping she can deflect anybody pointing out this shit based on her video and the fact shes a black woman doing programming classes. That whole thing is so blatantly obviously written by AI its not even funny. and she no doubt thinks shes super clever and has everybody fooled by her 'video.' Heres a thought - if she wasn't expecting somebody was going to ask questions about the assignment why did she go out of her way to make this recording in the first place? How the fuck did they restore her grade cause of that video? The proof she cheated is literally right in front of them
 
Look at the following facts:

This college is giving 15 percent of a sophomore class grade for writing a cover letter. It still takes students 2 days to write it.

College is a scam and full of worthless idiots. The professor should be banned from teaching for money, the college should be shut down and turned into a high school, and the dumb bitch in this article should go work at Walmart.
If this is like other post secondary institutions, it sounds like this is a 'business skills ready' course or something similar to help students with finding work and is typically mandatory for virtually every degree.

Blame retarded kids who don't know how to craft a resume or cover letter as to why these are mandatory nowadays.

And turnitin.com is still around? Jesus. That platform was problematic 20 fucking years ago.
 
I’ve taught. It makes me feel like I’m going insane second guessing this shit. I have low standards, but I don’t like wasting my time reading stuff that a robot wrote. And sometimes it does feel like something is too academic, but then I see a tell tale sign that it’s real writing, and it’s like oh, they’re not a cheater, they’re just the one in fifty that isn’t a fucking moron.

college kids hate doing homework too, like they’ve got this extreme sense of entitlement (don’t like it, take a different class, fuck off). I may just give up on it.
My recommendation to teachers is to go live in class with any assignment that counts. You can still let them type so that you can use AI assistance when evaluating, but your district needs to have purchased a screen monitoring software. My other recommendation is requiring an interview. If you write it yourself you should be able to have an easy conversation about what you wrote and the research that you did. Having smaller classes and multiple iterations of student work also allows teachers to get to know their student's work well enough that you wouldn't have to worry about AI as much. But good luck getting any educational institution to go for that!
For students trying to find the path of least resistance by using AI heavily, well, I'm sorry that your college experience is such a huge waste of your time and money. I really wish more jobs didn't require a bachelor's degree instead of just certification. Academics should really be left to the academics. Ha ha "just certification." That can be pretty challenging too! I wish people didn't overvalue higher ed.
Really don't see a good solution to this. Fact of the matter is schools have to teach writing, and to write anything of substance they will need more time than the 45 minutes they have in class to write it, and if they have any time outside of class they can consult AI. There are ways to stop the worst offenders who just copy and paste an entire essay from one prompt and hand it in without revision, but there are much more subtle ways to use AI than that.
Back when I was teaching in high school, this was already a problem without AI, and it was during the era that began "homework is racist". So I had suggested homework, that no one did, and everyone was surprised when they failed tests. Then you'd have admin crawling up your ass to ask what you could do to help Juanholio pass the class. To me AI is just the same problem. Even without it we were going to have a competency crisis. Young people are simply too retarded to realize the value of practice, and institutions are just too large to sort out who needs to keep practicing and who is ready to move on. So everyone suffers and you'll get these self-assessments that one doesn't need to do XYZ paper because it's a waste of time, but maybe it isn't, it's just boring. I really don't know what the solution is!
 
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I'm Latinx so universities are designed to minimize cheating because low trust society, in my university we took exams and had to defend every paper/tesis we did in person, the teacher would ask questions. If we had a project at least half of the grade would be on how well you could defend/ explain your work.
 
she does not understand the material at all
This was clear even to me (a retard), but I actually believed the "not AI" defense [edit - i.e. until reading your post] and thought it was just a "stupid person can repeat keywords and follow basic instructions but has no innovative/creative idas or even ability" thing that you see in graduates of "software engineering" lately. Undergraduates of muh STEM have so much in common with humanities majors (where undergrad programs are just {repeat keyword, agree with instructor's interpretation of novel} with the exception of linguistics and translation) now that I really don't trust anyone whose work goes into a compiler anymore unless they're over the age of 50.
 
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Time to write in cursive using pencil.
Especially a cover letter. Geez.

I know someone who went through this--they are a very good writer and the AI detection software kicked it back that they plagiarized when they didn't. The teacher/prof couldn't be bothered to do anything other than say, "the program said you plagiarized", so they had to do over the assignment. This was in graduate school. Talk about being pissed. It was also one of those heavily weighted, useless assignments that professors give out because they don't want to grade a bunch of assignments, even with AI assistance.

College is a joke and a scam, even in disciplines where extra education is necessary. Academia has ruined it.
 
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