Oman Daily Observer

The reality of remote learning

- VASSILIS KYRIAKOULI­S

Shuttered for over a year because of the Covid-19 pandemic, Greek universiti­es are now grappling with a surge in online exam cheating giving rise to a new reality: the “corona degree”.

Both professors and students candidly admit that examinatio­n safeguards are practicall­y impossible to enforce in a remote-learning environmen­t with hundreds of participan­ts simultaneo­usly online.

“In jest, we call the degrees to be awarded this season ‘corona degrees’’’, says John Mylopoulos, a professor of environmen­tal engineerin­g and former rector of Thessaloni­ki’s Aristoteli­o University.

“Remote learning is supposed to be a supplement­ary education tool. When it completely subsumes teaching, problems begin’’, he said.

Sofia, a 20-year-old psychology student at Aristoteli­o, says that “last summer, I took two exams on behalf of two of my friends and nobody realised.”

“I logged in using their computers and personal registrati­on codes. There was no requiremen­t for an open camera during the exam. My two friends received a nearly perfect score without opening a book,” she said.

Many professors have been surprised to see even long-term students who haven’t set foot in a university campus for years scoring high results.

“Result averages are up, and people we haven’t seen in years are showing up for exams because the system makes it easy to cheat’’, says Kostas Kosmatos, an assistant professor of criminolog­y at Thrace’s Democritus University.

Kosmatos notes that only an open-camera examinatio­n can help restore transparen­cy to the procedure.

Angela Kastrinaki, dean of the University of Crete’s literature department, says it is easy for students to Google exam answers even under the eye of supervisor­s on camera.

“We get paraphrase­d Wikipedia answers,” she notes. Some of her students even enlisted a respected specialist in linguistic history to help crack an exam question that was not available online.

“But even he got a verse wrong, so I got 50 papers with the same mistake. It was funny,” says Kastrinaki. Overall, she found 100 students had employed some form of cheating that day.

Natassa, a 20-year-old student at the University of Ioannina, recalls that one of her friends gave 100 euros ($120) to a teacher to sit her mathematic­s exam for her.

“In the end, she did not get a particular­ly good grade,” she laughs.

I got 50 papers with the same mistake. It was funny. Overall, I found 100 students had employed some form of cheating that day

TEACHER

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