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  • I haven't. Learning was always easy for me. Pay attention in class, take proper notes and do your homework. I know I'm lucky in that regard. Usually I only checked my notes the night before an exam and went through with it care-free. I only really studied for my math A-levels because it's not my strongest subject and for my final Spanish exam at the end of my 3-years job training because I could't care less about the language and thus only ever did the bare minimum learning it.

  • Not intentionally, but in high school we had a test on identification of flowers and plants. The teacher was an older man and he wasn't good with computers. He was showing pictures from the computer using video projector but didn't realize that Windows was displaying the filename of each picture in the title bar and each picture was named e.g. "daisy.jpg". Almost the whole class got full marks on the test except for the unlucky few who sat in the back row and had poor eyesight.

  • All the time! I do this thing where, before the test, I look over the subject matter and store the information in my head, letting me breeze through the questions.

    In seriousness, no. But I've definitely been cheated off of.

  • So in high school, we had TI-84 programmable calculators. Those could be used to store text. The teachers knew about that capability, so when there was a test where we were allowed to use the calculator, they wiped the memory of each one at the start of the test. However, I found that there was an app you could install called "fake", where you could restore all your saved data after a supposed memory wipe by entering a predefined numerical code. Teachers never knew that method existed. I may or may not have used that functionality a couple times. I don't feel bad about it, as memorizing some physics formulae would have never been any use for me in my later life anyway.

    Don't know if it counts as cheating, but in uni there were some professors who reused exams all the time. Some students set up a download server where you could download all previous exams and its solutions. Pretty sure the professors knew about it as well, but were still to lazy to come up with new exams I guess. So as we were allowed to bring a hand-written sheet of paper with notes (which is a way better policy than all the memorization in high school), I just had all the solutions on there.

  • Some times in school I did, and not only do I not regret it at all, I also see it as a necessary life skill.

    Many times people are put in deeply unfair situations where the rules are against them to begin with. If you play by the rules you will always lose.

    In school I had some teachers who didn't give a fuck. They were not taking their job or teaching seriously but were still sadistic people taking some form of sick pleasure against students.

    In such cases, there is no established framework in these situations where it there was a class with knowledge transfer/teaching, where the student is properly put to a test to verify he indeed adquire such knowledge. You rather have a sick social exercise where a sociopath is in a position of power making student's life hell and test results are semi random.

    In university I also had teachers who only pretended to teach. They would not be there for most of the time of the class or not show up at all, but they still made tests with the material that wasn't teached and that students didn't even know about. Of course many would just fail like this.

    In these cases I cheated.

    Life trows you these situations, and learning how to cheat is rather learning how to save yourself. I never cheated in legitimate situations, as I just didn't feel I was being treated with injustice, and therefor didn't even had the need to cheat.

  • Yes, kinda.

    I was in an entry-level “database” class that was administered online. I took it as padding to get credits to fulfill a requirement after switching majors. I figured it would be easy because I had a few years of on the job experience with databases.
    Although it was still the early days of online learning, my school did have a comprehensive online learning platform. The teacher was self-taught, and hosted the course on their personal website. While we did have a book and a syllabus, the actual course focused on how the teacher knew how to use Microsoft Access.
    They graded based on assignments that they handed out all at once at the beginning of the semester, plus tests. I did the entire semester’s homework in about 2 hours the first week, but found I kept missing test questions. After each test, it showed you the expected answers, and they often made little sense (not wrong, just weird – using anachronistic names for things, or the question was very specific about where menu options were that weren’t there anymore). You could retake the test as many times as you wanted (I don’t know if that was a bug or not), but I didn’t have that kind of time. So I just viewed source, where he’d clearly labeled each correct answer, and more or less skipped through the dumb quizzes.

  • Kind of. A college professor assigned a programming assignment for homework which I swear we had not covered the material required to implement it in class. They had however lazily assigned it from the textbook. So I went onto eMule (I know, right?) and found to teacher's guide and worked backwards from the solution to try to understand it. Then I wrote my own solution. It still didn't work perfectly though lol.

    Oh once in high school, the smart kid memorised the multiple choice answers to the science test which they had in first period. They shared it at lunch time. We all memorised it or wrote it on something like an eraser. Needless to say, the next day, the whole class was given a new test and a firm talking to.

  • Only once.

    9th grade physics.

    The teacher used an overlay to grade our multiple choice tests, and in a few spots, I'd mark two answers. I got caught, earned my crappy C, and never cheated again.

    I hated physics.

  • I completed a full semester of a class in a few days since I just googled the answers

  • Nope. I chose to go to school and paid to get educated, not to get grades and piece of paper. No cheating, no cramming ... I would only have been paying to cheat myself.

53 comments