Try GOLD - Free
In age of AI cheating, how do teachers draw the line?
Los Angeles Times
|September 27, 2025
A teacher tells a student not to use AI in a research assignment. But when the student does a browser search, an AI-generated explanation pops up unprompted.

Has the student just cheated? What now?
Navigating the use and misuse of artificial intelligence in school is complex and confusing especially when it comes to cheating.
"The cheating is off the charts. It's the worst I've seen in my entire career, " said Valencia High School English teacher Casey Cuny, a 23-year veteran. "Anything you send home, you have to assume is being AI'ed," he said.
In late 2022, after ChatGPT launched, many schools initially banned AI, fearing it would be used to churn out term papers, compose presentations and farm out math homework. And even though such uses have come to pass, views on how to respond have shifted dramatically.
Like many concerned educators, Cuny is not calling for an AI ban. Instead, "AI literacy" has become a buzzword of the back-to-school season, with a focus on how to leverage the potential of AI while minimizing its risks.
Ultimately, students will need to know how to use AI effectively and ethically, said Denise Pope, a senior lecturer at Stanford who is the co-lead researcher of a longterm, ongoing study of student cheating.
"Let's really look at what is the purpose of education," Pope said. "What are the skills that kids will need to know when they get out of this sort of particular environment of school."
Researchers at Stanford, led by Pope and colleague Victor Lee, have concluded that the prevalence of cheating does not appear to be greater than before AI. What's changed is the technology that underpins cheating.
In the Stanford study, which began well before the public availability of ChatGPT, students report anonymously on behaviors within the last month, including:
·Looking at someone else's answer during a test Using crib sheets
Hiding textbooks in bathroom stalls and using bathroom passes during exams
·Paying students from earlier periods to leak test questions to later test-takers.
This story is from the September 27, 2025 edition of Los Angeles Times.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Troops in Memphis to aid in crime fighting
For two weeks, Memphis has been bracing for an influx of National Guard troops after President Trump announced his intention to deploy them to the city. On Friday, residents finally learned more about that plan, and it looks to be very different from the deployments in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.
3 mins
September 27, 2025

Los Angeles Times
Leader says Israel ‘must finish the job’ in Gaza
Netanyahu also tells U.N. that recognizing a Palestinian state encourages terrorism.
4 mins
September 27, 2025

Los Angeles Times
No 'smoking gun': Why Eaton fire report didn't assign blame
The long-awaited Los Angeles County report examining the botched evacuation alerts in Altadena during the deadly Eaton fire cited a long list of shortcomings, from preparation to tactics.
5 mins
September 27, 2025

Los Angeles Times
Sinclair, Nexstar return Kimmel's program to airwaves after outcry
Nexstar and Sinclair Broadcast Group are ending their preemption of ABC's \"Jimmy Kimmel Live!
2 mins
September 27, 2025

Los Angeles Times
The go-to lawyer for public officials moving into private life
Robert Barnett, a Washington attorney who represented powerful politicians and many of the biggest stars in TV news business, died Friday after a long, unspecified illness. He was 79.
2 mins
September 27, 2025

Los Angeles Times
A schooled response to Trump's call to pray
'Love is patient and kind ... not arrogant or rude' or 'I hate my opponent.' Which is it?
5 mins
September 27, 2025

Los Angeles Times
Districts shift focus to teaching students about responsible AI use
How teachers, students use AI amid its infiltration in classes
5 mins
September 27, 2025

Los Angeles Times
Citing the Bible for Trump's new assignment
[Lopez, from B1]
4 mins
September 27, 2025

Los Angeles Times
A chance for Maiava, USC to prove themselves
Through four games this season, Jayden Maiava has done just about all he could to dispel any lingering doubts about him as USC's starting quarterback.
4 mins
September 27, 2025

Los Angeles Times
Vet targeted after speaking out
He wrote an op-ed about an ICE raid. Now Homeland Security is accusing him of assault.
5 mins
September 27, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size