The Record (Troy, NY)

New testing method aims to reduce cheating

- By Record staff newsroom@troyrecord.com @Troyrecord on Twitter

TROY, N.Y. » The era of widespread remote learning brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic requires online testing methods that effectivel­y prevent cheating, especially in the form of collusion among students. With concerns about cheating on the rise across the country, a solution that also maintains student privacy is particular­ly valuable.

In research published recently in npj Science of Learning, engineers from Rensselaer Polytechni­c Institute demonstrat­e how a testing strategy they call “distanced online testing” can effectivel­y reduce students’ ability to receive help from one another in order to score higher on a test taken at individual homes during social distancing.

“Often in remote online exams, students can talk over the phone or internet to discuss answers,” Ge Wang, an endowed chair professor of biomedical engineerin­g at Rensselaer and the correspond­ing author on this paper, said.

“The key idea of our method is to minimize this chance via discrete optimizati­on aided by knowledge of a student’s competenci­es,” Wang noted.

When a distanced online test is performed, students receive the same questions, but at varying times depending on their skill level. For instance, students of highest mastery levels receive each question after other groups of students have already answered those questions. This approach, Wang said, reduces the incentive for students to receive help from those who have more mastery of the material. In order to determine the order of each student’s questions, their competence levels are estimated using their grade point averages, SAT scores, or midterm scores, de

pending on what is available at a specific point in the semester.

According to statistica­l tests and post-exam surveys, this method reduced the points gained through collusion by orders of magnitude when compared to convention­al exam methods. As an added benefit, Wang said, when students knew collusion would not be possible, they were more motivated to study class material. Wang and his collaborat­ors hope to share this pedagogica­l innovation

beyond the Rensselaer campus.

“We plan to develop a good platform so that others can easily use this method,” Wang, a member of the Center for Biotechnol­ogy and Interdisci­plinary Studies at Rensselaer, added.

Mengzhou Li, a graduate student in biomedical engineerin­g, was the first author on this paper. Li and Wang were joined in this work by Hisham Mohamed and Uwe Kruger, also from the Department of Biomedical Engineerin­g, Lirong Xia, a professor of cognitive science, as well as teaching assistants and graduate students within their labs.

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