Cheating in Online Courses
Dan Ariely Blog
By Dan Ariely
August 10, 2012
A recent article in The Chronicle of Higher Education suggests that students cheat more in online than in face-to-face
classes. The article tells the story of Bob Smith (not his real name,
obviously) who was a student in an online science course. Bob logged in
once a week for half an hour in order to take a quiz. He didn’t read a
word of his textbook, didn’t participate in discussions, and still got
an A. Bob pulled this off, he explained, with the help of a
collaborative cheating effort. Interestingly, Bob is enrolled at a
public university in the U.S., and claims to work diligently in all his
other (classroom) courses. He doesn’t cheat in those courses, he
explains, but with a busy work and school schedule, the easy A is too
tempting to pass up.
Bob’s
online cheating methods deserve some attention. He is representative of
a population of students that have striven to keep up with their
instructor’s efforts to prevent cheating online. The tests were designed
in a way that made cheating more difficult, including limited time to
take the test, and randomized questions from a large test bank (so that
no two students took the exact same test).
But
the design of the test had two potential flaws: first, students were
informed in real time whether their answers were right or wrong; second,
they could take the test anytime they wanted. Bob and several friends
devised a system to exploit these weaknesses. They took the test one at a
time, and posted the questions together with the correct answers in a
shared Google document as they went. None of them studied, so the first
one or two students often bombed the test, but students who took the
test later did quite well.
When
we hear such stories of online cheating, the reasons for this behavior
seems rather simple: It doesn’t take a criminal mastermind to come up
with ways to cheat on a test when there’s no supervision and the entire
Internet is at hand. Gone are the quaint days of minutely lettered cheat
sheets, formulas written on the underside of baseball cap bills,
sweat-smeared key words on students’ palms. Now it’s just a student
sitting alone at home, looking up answers online and simply filling them
in.
While
we can probably all agree that cheating in online courses is easier to
pull off than in a physical classroom, I suspect that this simple
intuition is far from the whole story, and that e-cheating is more than
just a increased ease of getting away with it.
When
my colleagues and I have examined the effects of being caught on
dishonesty, we found that by and large changing the probability of being
caught doesn’t really alter the level of dishonesty. In one of our
experiments we asked two Master’s students at Ben-Gurion University of
the Negev named Eynav, who is blind, and Tali, who has normal sight, to
take a cab back and fourth between the train station and the university
twenty times. We chose this route for a particular reason: if the driver
activates the meter, the fare comes out to around $7 (25 NIS). However,
there is a customary rate on this route that costs around $5.50 (20
NIS) if the meter is not activated. Both Eynav and Tali asked to have
the meter activated every time they caught a cab, regardless of whether
the drivers informed them of the cheaper customary rate. At the end of
the ride, the women would pay the fare, wait a few minutes, then take
another cab back to where they started.
What
we found was that Tali was charged more than Eynav, despite the fact
that they both insisted on paying by the meter. Eynav quickly supplied
us with the explanation behind this curious phenomenon. “I heard the cab
drivers activate the meter when I asked them to,” she told us, “but
before we reached our final destination, I heard many of them turn the
meter off so that the fare ended up close to 20 NIS.” This never
happened to Tali. What’s more, many other experiments with
undergraduates yielded similar results. What these results suggest is
that simply making the situation such that people cannot get caught does
not automatically lead to higher levels of dishonesty.
So
if it’s not necessarily the fear of getting caught, what might be the
reasons for increased cheating? Based on our research, I would propose
that the primary reason is the increased psychological distance between
the dishonest act and its significance, and between teacher and student.
The difference a little distance can make is rather impressive. Take
the results from a study of around 10,000 golfers who were asked—among
other things—how likely golfers were to cheat by moving the lie of a
ball by 4 inches through various means: by nudging it with the golf
club; by kicking it; or by picking it up and moving it. What these
golfers told us was that 23% of golfers would likely move a ball with
their club while only 14% and 10% would move it by kicking it and
picking it up, respectively. What this tells us is that the extra
distance provided by the club allows for twice as much cheating as the
unavoidably conscious and culpable act of picking up the ball and moving
it.
What
does this have to do with cheating in online courses? Online classes
are by definition taken at a distance, from the comfort of the student’s
home where they are removed from the teacher, the other students, and
the academic institution. This distance doesn’t merely allow room for
people to get away with dishonest behavior; it creates the psychological
distance that allows people to further relax their moral standards. I
suspect that this aspect of psychological distance, and not simply the
ease of pulling it off, is at the heart of the online cheating problem.
There
is another important reason why we should care whether the cause for
online dishonesty is due to its ease or to a change in the perceived
moral meaning of the action. If online cheating is simply a matter of a
cost-benefit analysis, we can assume that over time online universities
will find ways to monitor and supervise students and this way prevent
such behavior. However, if we think that the root cause of online
cheating is more relaxed internal morals, then time is working against
us.
Let’s
think for a minute about illegal downloads. Have you ever downloaded a
song or TV show illegally? How badly do you feel about it? When I ask my
students these questions, almost all of them admit to having plenty of
illegally downloaded files on their computers—and they don’t feel badly
about it. As it turns out, dishonesty lies on a continuum: there are
behaviors we feel badly about, which is where our own morality holds us
back. But as cheating in a particular domain becomes more commonplace,
the negative feelings associated with it decrease until we don’t really
feel badly at all.
Let’s return to Bob and to cheating in online courses. This kind of behavior in online classes worries me because it is becoming more pervasive, and once we reach a point of moral indifference, it is nearly impossible to change this behavior. I don’t think we’ve reached this point yet, so we need to work as hard as we can to counteract the trend toward dishonesty. Otherwise what’s often considered an important tool for democracy in education could be made worthless.
(c) Dan Ariely Blog

