I usually watch everything at 1.25x speed and now imagine my surprise when i open the speed menu and its at 1x speed meanwhile big A over here spittin faster than eminem
@@PringoOrSomething I watch my RU-vid videos at two times speed 'Cause normal doesn't give me any dopamine I'm a lot like a junkie that wants to be On a bigger dose to feel what he needs
@@PringoOrSomethingthere's def some channels that just make really slow videos, and yeah sometimes im fine with it but if the topic's interesting but the cc is just slow to progress in the narrative, 1.25x saves some time. Sometimes 1.5
When I went to high school looking up the sparknotes for a book before writing a report was considered cheating. Nowadays it's called "going above and beyond" and "truly researching your topic". If sparknotes is even still a thing. This comment really dates me. People are going to know im as old as Atroic.
Sparknotes is still a thing don't worry. At least it was a year ago, we still considered it cheating cause people would use it when they didn't read the book.
I don't think Sparknotes is considered cheating insofar as its just hindering your ability to do what you're supposed to which is analyse. You can't analyse if someone else is doing it for you. Which basically means if you're meant to study a book for a test, and you're given an oral exam, not having read the book and analysed it yourself is going to backfire greatly since there's a ceiling to how much you can take in from sources like Sparknotes. I've seen people, and I am one of those people, fail that test because of our lax approach. Then again I did attend an IB school so the criteria and difficulty is much higher, but the goal of it is the same.
I did the corrupted file thing once and I think my teacher was just lazy because he never told me to send it again he just gave me a 100 and didn’t say anything
I think school should take a book out of cyber security and hire white hat cheaters from the student body. Incitvise students to report how they were able to cheat to the teacher so they can reduce the number of other people that can do that. "If you cheat on this test and tell me how you did it you don't have to do the next homework, but if you get caught you have to take a harder test" Could probably make a game out of it too, get the whole class in on it so people don't feel the social pressure of the peers for being a rat I wonder if we actually reduced the severity and punishment of cheating, actually communicated to kids why this stuff is important to them personally to learn, and gave praise for the clever and creative methods kids come up with to cheat, if that would lead to positive outcomes or negative ones. Interesting thought experiment at least.
HS teachers giving extensions is a great thing and super important, its what a lot of private schools are starting to do. It encourges communicating with teachers and prepares people for college. Most college professors give extensions easily because of course load issues. Developing the reflex to ask for an extension insteading bsing or just taking the L is super important for college and definitely was for me.
I’m a public school teacher in my first year. In high school we were almost always granted an extension if we asked and had a somewhat decent reason. Now, we are not allowed to have deadlines (due to so many students performing so terribly) and they need the state money. In my opinion there needs to be an in between. Teaches deadlines but also teaches open communication rather than making my life hell when I get every single assignment every 2 months the 3 times we are allowed to set deadlines a year
One of my friends in high school got an extension on an essay for saying his grandpa had a heart attack and went to the hospital. He then found an image on Google of an older guy that looked like he could be a relative and showed it to the teacher. He then used multiple google accounts to report the image so now it can't be found on Google anymore
At 2/23 I worked in middle school and kids couldn't understand why I wouldn't let them go to the bathroom at a certain time. I have BeReal as well and knew when it was going off. They also couldn't believe that I noticed when they had two different browser windows open to quickly switch.
I'm genuinely curious if there are any sources to "It's scientifically proven that our attention spans shrink". All I could find on the topic was a Marketing Paper from Microsoft from like 2018 where it says something that they have to catch your attention within the first 10 seconds or whatever. But that doesn't really have anything to do with attention spans, and more so with that being roughly the time our brain needs to compute if a specific information is worth our time.
3:27 When I was in gradschool, worked as a TA and had a few students try to pull this in a comp sci course, but it was obvious it was just garbage data and wasn't actually an archive file so they got a 0. If you're not super blatant, most markers won't care but if it's obvious or impacts their work schedule then tough luck. If you need more time, you honestly have a better chance just asking for an extension.
I had an AP physics class in junior year where we could walk in the classroom during test days and ask for an extension with no previous email or reason for needing the extension. Shit was fire.
I'm so glad I finished school before cheating got so out of hand. The year I passed high school was the year chatgpt really started taking off and people started using it to make essays.
A friend of mine in high school had his arm in a cast during the exam period with a bunch of autographs on it and he used it to cheat by writing math formulas in between the autographs. It was so big brain but he got caught anyways because at the end of the exam the teacher decided she was going to sign his cast as well 😂
There was a case in my school where people would use calculators to program in equations for tests and got all better calculators banned. Though cheating is like a guaranteed fail in the class.
When I was in middle school I would turn in papers late by stepping on them to make footprints and putting them under the teachers desk so they thought they misplaced it.
I got an engineering degree from BU. In some classes most students would circulate the same labs & hw from previous years. I failed a couple classes because I didn't swallow my pride. Not cheating was so hard. Be careful crossing any bridges in the future lol
@@LiveType the type of class I'm talking about is very lab and assignment heavy, a good 60% of the grade was stuff you completed without supervision. I usually do well on exams so I guess I didn't consider that part, but a poor student could get 50% on those and plagiarize everything else and end up with a B-. Again, specifically for these types of classes only
2:33 When I was in middle school I studied with my mom for hours the day before every single history test. Then while taking the test I took out my notebook with all my notes cause the teacher just sat at her desk with everyone having those big folder privacy things. So I cheated on the tests pretty easily. The worst part of all of this is that I didn't need to cheat because I studied, and I didn't need to study cause I liked history so much that I already knew all the answers. I still don't know why I did that.
A really compelling parallel to some of the ideas espoused here is the video: why it's rude to suck at warcraft by folding ideas. It's a gaming microcosm of the psychological phenomenon of feeling like you're falling behind when your peers are cheating.
I think it certainly doesn't help that with the standards of education rising but the quality of education is not rising, many people are afraid of failing to meet these rising expectations and don't believe in their capacity to achieve the minimum expected of them. But there is one consistent thing that can get you out of it at a risk, and that's cheating. Of course, it means that education is literally wasted since you're not doing any of the work anymore, but the logical importance of education falls on deaf ears when people only care about the accomplishment, be it fake or not.
I wasn't the smartest in high school. I attended an international school with an IB curriculum, but many variables led me to being a terrible student and failing high school. I had many opportunities to cheat just so I don't fail but I never once considered it because it was just wrong. If you're struggling at something or you're failing at something, be honest about it so you can improve as a student or as a person. Because once you get used to cheating and use it in every instance, people are going to figure out your qualities are fake as all hell because you didn't do the work to earn the title or certificate and you're just fucking yourself over in the long term. That's why when I learnt a group of girls was cheating in a test in my IB Psych class, I told the teacher who they were and how they did it. Certainly did them a favour because if they can't pass a test like that, how can they expect to pass the final exams. That was like 6 years ago and now the way people cheat is more digitally inclined. My friend in uni cheats in basically every course he can and it frustrates me because I never heard him study once, I wouldn't trust him for a day in his life to pass a single oral exam or written exam. He's not going to make it and he's almost at the end of his 4 years, and it's clear he won't make it because whenever he talks about uni, he dodges our questions on how he's doing. He spent years cheating that its finally backfiring and its going to come together as a waste of money. What's the point of cheating when you're just going to get your ass kicked later for lying about your capability.
it’s interesting to hear people’s experience of teachers as boomers mine were very different. i grew up in a very expensive city so new teachers would get jobs here but live way outside of town because teachers are paid shit then within a few years they would get jobs near where they lived or move back to the east coast. nearly all of the teachers I ever had were in their first 5 years of teaching, i had over 10 teachers under the age of 25. pretty shit at teaching but never a problem with tech
When I was in college the professor let us know that he knew someone cheated. I went to him after class and admitted to cheating. I had to write a ten page paper on a random topic and we had a lengthy discussion. He loved my paper so much that he gave me an A and didn’t tell the school about it. Oh, the kicker is that I was the only one who admitted guilt. He failed everyone he caught cheating and this was in a 50 person class.
Whats funny with the corrupte word doc trick atrioc mentioned is that I did that once but then my teacher was wise to it and required me to send a screenshot of the documents last edited date as proof that i didnt work on it past the deadline. Not like it isnt easy to change the computer date though 😅😅
I totally did the trick of changing the document last-edited date. There's a simple program I used in college to change the last edited dates of my files (it even had a portable version that you could use from a flashdrive, but IIRC it saved something to the computer each time during the document editing process so you would have to delete that folder if you were paranoid like me about them checking the school computers), that way I could buy myself some time and send it via email an hour or two after the due time (instead of the Blackboard/Canvas uploader) and claim that my internet kept failing to upload the file (something that actually used to happen to me a ton and sparked the idea of the lie, for some reason our modem would just die if you tried uploading anything). I would change the edit time to something like 11 PM the previous day to make it more believable like "yes I was uploading it with only an hour left so I'm dumb for doing that, but I was desperately trying to upload it" (I was actually desperately trying to become the highest WPM writing, alt-tabbing master student of all time).
a prof in one of my online classes was literally like how are so much of you failing you can literally cheat and ill never know it was funny he mustve been on tenure or smt cus aint no way he wont get fired for that
as i student in college i use chat gpt to help me with every assignment damn near, i dont rely on it but I'm a terrible writer so I use it more as an assistant. also its really good for brainstorming ideas if you ever get writers block
Yeah its a great assistant since it helps fill in the blanks when you're trying to find a word for something and you're blanking. ChatGPT is the only engine that can answer your vague questions that Google can't. Where it gets out of hand is when its literally writing the essay for you. When it reaches the conclusions for you. When it literally does majority of the formulating and thinking for you. Such as the case of someone inputting a bunch of bullet points and telling the AI to write an essay in the style of X or Y, including X or Y. That's where its literally frame by frame cheating.
As someone that dropped out of college at the height of the '08 financial crisis and just finishing my masters this quarter, school is SO MUCH EARIER than it was 10 years ago. A trained monkey could get a degree nowadays. Professors used to not give a fuck about you, but nowadays they genuinely don't eat to fail ANYONE. Just show up and turn in your work. Easy big A's y'all! Also fuck me for still graduating during a financial crisis...
Maybe I’m crazy but I think there’s a big difference in the tax fraud example and cheating with AI in that cheating on your taxes will get you a better result where from what I’ve seen you just put in less effort cheating with AI, but don’t necessarily outperform someone doing the course properly. It’s hard to feel like you’re falling behind when you’re getting better marks than AI cheaters even if they’re putting in no effort, unless your only goal is to pass
My friend is a comp science professor, and he deals with cheaters on every single test and homework, mostly using AI. He made a good point, the kids aren’t just violating college policy, they’re entering the computer science major without even knowing how to code.
Because of covid alot of school and exams are at home, at least in Norway and the major i am in. The truth is that almost all home exams are 90-100% supported by chat gpt. I know people that dont know what print("Hello World") does in our code subjects. And get B - A just with AI. And all admit to it to other students. So its not something hidden.
colleges are being smart with this, my girlfriend especially has recently seen her professors step into the idea that AI is a tool and should be treated as such, i could also see this really being the end of degrees, but we’ll wait to see
@@RaeneYT you go into school, expect to come out with a job but it's not even the reality even more. College is a scam and it took going through it to realize that. You make your own image, not a degree or school name. The fields are also so oversaturated now that it's not worth it, you aren't going to get a job without experience but the "experience" you've spent so many years doing and working for are useless, not too mention the debt. Maybe not now, maybe not five years, but more people are realizing just how much of a scam college is and that a college doesn't guarantee shit.
@@jolyproductions The market is so run down and stupendously picky. For the past 30 years, the requirements scaled up to impossible standards and something as simple as literally ANY degree will get your foot in the door. Obviously it doesn't guarantee a job, but it does become a filter that gives you opportunities. The sad reality is that if you don't have a degree, you'll be shown the door 80% of the time. And even if you have a degree, you need to bust your ass to stand out and prove that you have something others don't, something that works best when there are in-person interviews, but even those have been scaled down in favour of multiple online interviews. Things have just gotten harder since tech has progressed since hirer's believe they can filter out all the bad people and find the perfect candidate if they work hard enough rather than just trusting a resume and your gut like back in the day.
Cheating is so bad that I got called out by a prof for using ai to write a paper, and it was one of the times I used no ai to write the paper cause it was research for a project. It was online and I had to go to the school and speak with the teacher, he background checked me and concluded that I didn't cheat based on my past work
Two crazy cheating stories I heard: A guy in one of my EE classes wouldn’t do our labs and instead got really good at photoshop and he would recreate the graphs and stuff we got for our labs instead of showing up and doing a 2 hour lab. Was so crazy it really seemed like he put more effort into doing it than he would have just going to lab and building the power regulator or whatever Second one: I have a buddy who’s in cybersecurity and he worked for a proctoring company, apparently people overseas will do have someone else do proctored exams with a second computer to cheat on while they sit on the webcam and pretend to do the test, so he’d have to interrogate them during tests and make them turn their cameras around and show where the wires were plugged into and stuff to verify they were actually taking the test
For context I’m a junior with a focus in Management who basically got into Management because business is the major for people who were undecided (at least that’s the current state of it). Every break I ask about applying for jobs and every break their response is, “You don’t need to start thinking about one yet” since taking at least four units a semester helps me fall under certain grants. I wanted to drop a class this sem because having 4 classes each with their own group work assignments is hard to keep track of especially with the normal weekly course work and quizzes. I even added that I would be down to find part time employment but my parents immediately jumped to all the things they were paying for me despite me already offering to do so in the past. Of course they also told me that everything I learn in school is not something that I will apply in my job and relearning information is a natural part of the job environment. Students get told all the time that a degree no longer cuts it in the job market and core skills are things that employers are looking for which stresses me the fuck out. Guess I’ll cheat but this ain’t benefitting me. 😂
The problem is that ppl are already bad with text comprehension. Now instead of the little pratice they have writting they just GPT it. This is just going to make it easier for older ppl to keep their jobs in the future lol.
Working for the programming class and getting a C only for the guys who didnt do jack shit ChatGPT their way to an A or a B is a real bad feeling. Definitely feels like you're just hurting yourself for no reason.
Lmao i never used Chat GPT for anything in my life But at my university in some classes you have the opportunity to earn Bonus Points for the exams by answering some Quiz questions. And i found a glitch in the software which allows me to check if my answers are correct before submitting the test. So yeah ez points for every semester
the next decade or so is gunna be the easiest time to go to/pass college. im not the best essay writer by any means but my sister uses chat GPT for every little part of every essay shes gotten since she started college 2 years ago. she also uses it for math homework; homework in general was already cheated like crazy before but chat GPT has made it completely useless at this point. Until the majority of professors catch up, which I genuinely think will take about 10 years theyre cooked. college hasnt ever and will never be this easy again.
Has it gotten you good marks? Not meaning that in a rude way I’m more just curious if it’s actually working beyond just trying to pass. My friends and I haven’t found it very helpful for anything but brainstorming, but most of us also need high GPA’s so I don’t know if that’s affecting things
@@charliebrackenbury6115 if youre trying todo more than just pass brainstorming with it is really all you can get out of it. chat GPT is for the C's get degrees type people, which to be fair seems like the majority at this point.
@@charliebrackenbury6115what do you need high GPAs for? the vast majority of people aren’t doing post grad academics and i’ve never heard people in the real world ask for your grades
@@BarginsGalore I mean at my school you need a pretty high GPA for exchange, honours, good internships, and grad school, and at least half the people I know are considering a masters so I honestly don’t think I know anyone c’s get degrees-ing their way through. But then again my school tends to lean more academic so I get that’s not the case everywhere
I don't understand, we have to use something called "lockdown browser" during exams in college, which prevents you from accessing anything on your computer except the exam. If you leave the exam, you have to be granted access again. Why not use this to prevent cheating on tests and exams?
My asian and russian professors just didn't care if people cheated at A&M. The liberal arts professors cared, but the technical ones just hated teaching. In the end, the degree is all that matters so just cheat as mucha s you can, since that's how big Tech and Banking work, lol.
I ran a scheme in high school where I would photoshop nutrition facts for vitamin water bottles and laminate them. I could fill that bitch with formulas and people could just easily re-wrap their bottles with an identical but slightly altered label.
It surprises me how many people cheated on their tests. I genuinely didn't. I wonder what the correlation between cheating and career success is. In the real world one doesn't memorize everything. We read references and consult people who know more...... Kinda like cheating. The creative problem solving to actually cheat can also be beneficial skill sets too. But the mentality and dishonestly of cheating to succeed will also likely hold back your career. It doesn't take long before your co workers realize you are dishonest.
From a student in CS, cheating is incredibly more prevalent than it was 2 years ago. 2 years ago we had Chegg, which was incredibly powerful, but it wasn't able to do things like program for us.
Getting caught isn't their concern. Any teacher can see the sudden spike in essay writing ability and know for a fact that it's AI driven, it's just not provable so you can't contest it. They can pass all digital assignments but when they sit for written exams and there's a cross examination of their writing ability, their downfall will be hilarious to watch, but that was years ago. I don't even know if schools do written exams still.
when you made your first video on chat gpt my cheating game changed & became exponentially easier. but a week or two after everybody knew about it so i had to get a bit more clever with it but i still use it in school