Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Students use WhatsApp to cheat in DU law exam

- Prawesh Lama prawesh.lama@hindustant­imes.com

CHEAT CODE Cops suspect involvemen­t of Haryana gangs who hire pvt teachers for answers

doesn’t matter if you spell best as ‘bast’ and answer as ‘answar’, you could still help students crack Delhi’s University’s law entrance examinatio­n if you have a smartphone.

Days of students carrying chits or notes to the examinatio­n hall may be a trick of the past because messaging app WhatsApp has made it all too easier. The Delhi police are probing at least four reported cases of students using WhatsApp on their smartphone­s to get answers in the Delhi’s University’s law entrance exam held over the weekend.

The modus operandi — students carry more than one cell phone into the hall and deposit one phone when asked by the teacher. The minute they get the question papers, they take photograph­s of the question paper and WhatsApp it to their counterpar­ts, who then send the answer key within minutes. The best part is it works better than text message and does not run the risk of talking over the phone.

On Sunday, when an invigilato­r reported a Delhi University student in south campus college using WhatsApp to copy the answers, the officers on checking his cell phone were shocked to find answers of all the four pages in four image files. His associates on the other line who were sending the answers had typed ‘All the bast’ showing that they too took help from others to send the answers.

THE STUDENTS SEND PIC OF QUESTION PAPER ON WHATSAPP. THEY RECEIVE THE ANSWER KEY WITHIN MINUTES

Another image found on the student’s WhatsApp record was that of the ‘Answar’ for all the 100 questions. Police suspect the role of organised gangs in Haryana, who hire private teachers to type answers on a plain A4 sheet, take photos and WhatsApp it back to the students.

This is not the lone case. Police in north Delhi registered an FIR against two students who were caught with three mobile phones at Hans Raj College on Sunday. The invigilato­r, while checking their phones, saw the phone had answers sent via WhatsApp.

Vinay Gupta, Dean of Examinatio­n, DU said there were eightnine cases of students sneaking mobile phones in centres such as Hans Raj, Kirori Mal and Hindu. Gupta said they have written to the police. “These students carried two mobiles and submitted one with the examiner. But when they took out the other phone, they were caught.”

Of the nine cases, the use of WhatsApp to cheat was found only in four cases.

Following such cases, Delhi police have asked the university officials to keep an eye on students carrying cell phones. Another student adopting a similar modus operandi was caught at law faculty, while writing the same exam.

“The photos were taken within seconds of receiving the questions. Invigilato­rs may not be very attentive while distributi­ng the papers, hoping that nobody would cheat. In multiple choice questions, this works well with the student inside the class who only has to tick the correct answer,” said an investigat­ing officer.

The dean said they would make frisking stricter from next year. “The system is already strict due to which there was no paper leak unlike previous years. But we will take steps to ensure nothing like what happened this year is repeated,” he said.

 ?? HT FILE ?? The police are probing at least four reported cases of students using WhatsApp on their smartphone­s to get answers in the Delhi’s University’s law entrance exam held over the weekend.
HT FILE The police are probing at least four reported cases of students using WhatsApp on their smartphone­s to get answers in the Delhi’s University’s law entrance exam held over the weekend.

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