ChatGPT giving advice on how to cheat in university assignments: how workable are its suggestions?
Interactive Technology and Smart Education
ISSN: 1741-5659
Article publication date: 17 April 2024
Issue publication date: 30 October 2024
Abstract
Purpose
The use of generative artificial intelligence (genAi) language models such as ChatGPT to write assignment text is well established. This paper aims to assess to what extent genAi can be used to obtain guidance on how to avoid detection when commissioning and submitting contract-written assignments and how workable the offered solutions are.
Design/methodology/approach
Although ChatGPT is programmed not to provide answers that are unethical or that may cause harm to people, ChatGPT’s can be prompted to answer with inverted moral valence, thereby supplying unethical answers. The authors tasked ChatGPT to generate 30 essays that discussed the benefits of submitting contract-written undergraduate assignments and outline the best ways of avoiding detection. The authors scored the likelihood that ChatGPT’s suggestions would be successful in avoiding detection by markers when submitting contract-written work.
Findings
While the majority of suggested strategies had a low chance of escaping detection, recommendations related to obscuring plagiarism and content blending as well as techniques related to distraction have a higher probability of remaining undetected. The authors conclude that ChatGPT can be used with success as a brainstorming tool to provide cheating advice, but that its success depends on the vigilance of the assignment markers and the cheating student’s ability to distinguish between genuinely viable options and those that appear to be workable but are not.
Originality/value
This paper is a novel application of making ChatGPT answer with inverted moral valence, simulating queries by students who may be intent on escaping detection when committing academic misconduct.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
Author contributions: Dirk H.R. Spennemann: Conceptualization, Methodology, Data curation, Formal analysis, Writing – Original draft, Visualization and Project administration. All authors: Investigation and –Writing – Review and editing.
Funding: The authors declare that no funds, grants or other support were received during the preparation of this manuscript.
Data availability statement: The text of the full conversations has been deposited at doi: https://doi.org/10.13140/RG.2.2.12357.67041 and https://doi.org/10.13140/RG.2.2.25779.44323.
Conflicts of interest: The authors have no relevant financial or non-financial interests to disclose.
Citation
Spennemann, D.H.R., Biles, J., Brown, L., Ireland, M.F., Longmore, L., Singh, C.L., Wallis, A. and Ward, C. (2024), "ChatGPT giving advice on how to cheat in university assignments: how workable are its suggestions?", Interactive Technology and Smart Education, Vol. 21 No. 4, pp. 690-707. https://doi.org/10.1108/ITSE-10-2023-0195
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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