{"id":13552,"date":"2012-07-09T22:07:35","date_gmt":"2012-07-09T22:07:35","guid":{"rendered":""},"modified":"2012-07-09T22:07:38","modified_gmt":"2012-07-09T22:07:38","slug":"Cheating-voids-70-students-tests-at-top-NYC-school-","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/asiancemagazine.com\/?p=13552","title":{"rendered":"Cheating voids 70 students\u2019 tests at top NYC school"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong><em>Seventy students were involved in a pattern of smartphone-enabled cheating last month at Stuyvesant High School, New York City officials said Monday, describing an episode that has blemished one of the country\u2019s most prestigious public schools.  The cheating involved several state exams and was uncovered after a cellphone was confiscated from a 16-year-old junior during a citywide language exam on June 18, according to a city Department of Education investigation.<\/em><\/strong> <\/p>\n<p>Cellphones are not permitted in city schools, and when officials looked into the student\u2019s phone, they found a trail of text messages, including photos of test pages, that suggested pupils had been sharing information about state Regents exams while they were taking them. Sixty-nine students had received the messages and responded to them, the department said. All of the students will have to retake the exams, and the one whose phone was confiscated, who was said to be at the center of the cheating network, faces possible suspension and may have to transfer to another school by fall, the department said. Four other students involved in the cheating could also face suspension, a spokeswoman said.  \u201cCheating has taken place for who knows how long,\u201d the schools chancellor, Dennis M. Walcott, said Monday morning in an interview on the John Gambling show, a radio program in New York. \u201cNow with technology, and that\u2019s why we banned cellphones; people have the ability to use new technology to try to cheat. So people are always trying to think of new ways to do things. It\u2019s not acceptable.\u201d  The revelations that dozens of Stuyvesant students had cheated on tests not considered particularly challenging for them were the latest example of the competitive pressures inside top schools. In December, officials uncovered widespread cheating on an English final exam by students at a well-regarded school outside Houston; hundreds of students were believed to be involved, and 60 were disciplined. An SAT cheating scandal on Long Island last year, in which test takers used fake IDs to impersonate other students, led to nationwide changes in the way college admissions exams are administered. <\/p>\n<p>Cheating has been a difficult issue for Stuyvesant for some years, one that students have not shied from confronting. An editorial in the Stuyvesant newspaper, The Spectator, two years ago pinpointed a culture of \u201cacademic dishonesty,\u201d whose roots derived from an emphasis on numerical success, like high test scores, rather than on valuing learning that is not as easy to measure.  \u201cThere is too much weight put on a couple of numbers to determine your worth as a student and a human being,\u201d said Benjamin Koatz of Forest Hills, Queens, who graduated in June and is headed to Brown University. \u201cAnd the highly competitive nature at Stuyvesant lends a hand in that, but it is really endemic to the system.\u201d  Mr. Koatz said that when a couple of points can make the difference in getting into an Ivy League school, \u201cthen there is an incentive there, especially since most of the students come from families where the goal is \u2018Ivy League school or bust\u2019; you either go to an Ivy League school or you haven\u2019t lived up to your potential.\u201d strong><em>He said more than 80 students had applied this year to M.I.T., which he called \u201ccrazy competition.\u201d<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Department of Education officials declined to say whether the Stuyvesant students involved in the cheating would also be forced to retake any courses, or to what extent the episode would be noted on transcripts sent to colleges. Invalidation of tests does not go on a student\u2019s record, but a suspension can.  Last month, the principal, Stanley Teitel, sent a letter to dozens of students implicated in the cheating, telling them he found this \u201cbreach of integrity very serious.\u201d  Will online exams mean more test-taking for kids? The letter notified them that some of their class privileges, including the right to leave school for lunch or be members of school leadership organizations like the Student Union, an important college r\u00e9sum\u00e9-building activity, would be revoked. <\/p>\n<p><strong><em>Administrators found that cheating occurred during state Regents exams for United States history and English \u2014 tests that almost every Stuyvesant student passes \u2014 and for physics. Another student, who cheated in a more traditional way, through the passage of notes during the physics Regents exam, also faces suspension.<\/em><\/strong>   <\/p>\n<p><strong><em>IF YUE NEED TO CHEAT ON ANY REGENTS EXAM=YUE ARE TRULY DESPERATE AND DUE NOT DESERVE TO STEP FOOT ON THE GROUNDS AT MIT!!  SAVE IT FOR YOUR FRESHMAN YEAR SPANISH EXAM LIKE TED KENNEDY DID!! DUE I NEED TO TELL PEOPLE EVERYTHING?? \ud83d\ude41  AS A RESULT THE BRONX HIGH SCHOOL OF SCIENCE WILL UNDOUBTEDLY PICK UP GOLD RIBBON POINTS FOR THIS ATROCITY!! \ud83d\ude41<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><em>Madeline S. Rivera, 18, who graduated from Stuyvesant this year, said the culture of cheating was not specific to her school but was a sign of the current age, \u201cespecially with social networking,\u201d which she said made breaches easier. \u201cI can assure you it is pretty much the same at every other high school.\u201d  Ms. Rivera, of Astoria, Queens, said a friend relayed a story about cheating that occurred on a Regents test at a public school in Queens, though it was not treated as seriously. As for the phone policy at the school, Ms. Rivera said, \u201cas long as they are out of sight and out of mind,\u201d the ban on bringing them inside is not enforced.<\/em><\/strong> <\/p>\n<p><strong><em>MIT IS THE ROLLS ROYCE OF SPECIALIZED TECH SCHOOLS FOR MATH AND SCIENCE SEW THINK OUT OF THE BOX AND GO TO JOHNS HOPKINS OR A UNIVERSITY OF EQUALLY HIGH STANDING KNOWN FOR MEDICINE OR BUSINESS AND MAJOR IN MATH\/SCIENCE WHILE THERE!! \ud83d\ude42<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.msnbc.msn.com\/id\/48136214\/ns\/us_news-the_new_york_times\/\">SOURCE<\/a><br \/>\n<!--break--><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Seventy students were involved in a pattern of smartphone-enabled cheating last month at Stuyvesant High School, New York City 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students were involved in a pattern of smartphone-enabled cheating last month at Stuyvesant High School, New York City 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