Advertisement
Advertisement

新足迹

 找回密码
 注册
新足迹 门户 中学教育 查看内容

NSW高考HSC作弊学生增多

2010-3-27 15:43| 发布者: patrickzhu | 查看: 1869| 原文链接

NSW教育部网站昨天发布的信息显示,过去三年里HSC考试里被抓住的作弊学生人数已经增加。

呵呵,悉尼SMH这次很小心,在公布这些数字之前,特意按照“信息自由法”的规定得到了教育部的允许。

作弊的数量为:
2009年 636起
2008年 599起
2007年 586起

现在学生作弊的手段也是五花八门,从传统型的手写小抄到拷贝比如iPod或者手机里的作弊内容
。。。
。。。
当然,相比于每年有7万名考生和45万中HSC单项考试而言,这个作弊的数字显然没啥好特别指责的。


Number of HSC cheats on the rise
Anna Patty EDUCATION EDITOR
March 27, 2010 - 3:00AM

THE number of students caught cheating in the Higher School Certificate exams has increased over the past three years, figures released yesterday on the NSW Board of Studies website show.

The figures, posted after the Herald requested them under freedom-of-information laws, show that there were 636 cases of cheating or technical exam breaches in last year's HSC exams. In 2008 there were 599 cases and in 2007 there were 586.

The complaints ranged from students bringing cheat notes into exams to copying material from an electronic device such as an iPod or mobile phone.

Of students who completed HSC projects, one bought and modified a commercial product and submitted it as original work. Other students were penalised for plagiarising material that they had memorised.

There was a case of a student submitting an essay response based on material that had been downloaded from a computer.

The president of the Board of Studies, Tom Alegounarias, said last night: ''Plagiarism is plagiarism, even if it's in an exam situation.''

Another example of a ''reproduced response'' was a music student who had submitted as original work a chord structure based on copyrighted material.

Technical breaches of the exam rules included a student taking a mobile phone into an exam room, where it rang and disturbed other students.

Another student submitted a visual artwork that was too big to display at the marking centre.

Penalties against some students ranged from loss of some marks to the awarding of zero marks. Students found to have committed less serious breaches were given warning letters.

The Board of Studies said the breaches should be seen in the context of about 70,000 students sitting about 450,000 exams.

This story was found at: http://www.smh.com.au/national/e ... -20100326-r31r.html
Advertisement
Advertisement


Advertisement
Advertisement
返回顶部