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22 University of Kent students given zero marks after using AI systems such as ChatGPT to cheat on assessments

By Ed Cullinane & Pieter Snepvangers

Some university students in Kent have been given zero marks after being found to have used AI (artificial intelligence) bots to cheat in their assessments.

They were among almost 400 students nationwide investigated for using systems such as ChatGPT.

More students at the University of Kent were investigated over allegedly using AI bots to cheat than anywhere else in the country. Picture: Chris Davey
More students at the University of Kent were investigated over allegedly using AI bots to cheat than anywhere else in the country. Picture: Chris Davey

The programme is an AI language model that can answer questions and provide information on various topics, making it useful for research, education, and general inquiries.

Students can write essays with it in minutes with the correct prompting.

In total, 47 students at the University of Kent, which has campuses in Canterbury and Medway were investigated for using AI bots like ChatGPT to complete assignments.

A total 22 students were found “guilty”, receiving marks of zero.

The uni had the highest number of students being investigated in the country.

Figures obtained by the student newspaper The Tab show that 377 UK students have faced a probe for cheating on their coursework.

The University of Kent has campuses in Medway, as above, and Canterbury
The University of Kent has campuses in Medway, as above, and Canterbury

Of those, at least 146 have so far been found 'guilty' - with investigations still ongoing at dozens of universities.

The data, released under the Freedom of Information Act (FOI), also show up to 40% of all UK universities had experienced the issue.

This includes 23 of the 24 Russell Group Universities such as LSE (London School of Economics and Political Science), UCL (University College London) and the University of Glasgow.

Some universities say the actual numbers could be “significantly higher'’ as they have only begun to scratch the surface of the issue.

The investigations follow a “boom” in AI technology since the start of 2023, which has made AI chat bot technology available to the public on demand - often for free.

A spokeswoman for the University of Kent said: “Our staff and students get regular guidance and training on how we should and shouldn't be using AI as we all get used to this new technology together.

The University of Kent had the highest number of students in the country caught using AI to write essays
The University of Kent had the highest number of students in the country caught using AI to write essays

“This includes support with how students can best use AI in their studies and worked examples of what could constitute plagiarism when you use it - helping us identify early any potential misuse, which can often be unintentional.

“Advances in artificial intelligence will continue to have an impact on the way we teach and learn, presenting both opportunities and risks for all universities.

“Students here are engaging well with the support on offer and we will continue to review and monitor our approach as the technology develops.”

UK universities have scrambled to confront cheating using such sources.

Despite new training for staff, institutions have struggled to respond to the new technology - which uses real life data and arguments from online sources to create often bland but coherent essays.

Earlier this year, anti-plagiarism software Turnitin - used by most UK universities - revealed new software that could identify fake essays, but staff remain sceptical about its accuracy.

“Advances in artificial intelligence will continue to have an impact on the way we teach and learn, presenting both opportunities and risks...”

University of London, Birkbeck, and Leeds Beckett University were also found to have investigated the second and third most students in the country respectively.

However the number of instances of cheating could be much higher, as many universities revealed they do not hold data on investigations into the behaviour centrally - or simply refuse to reveal the data.

Anglia Ruskin University in Cambridge says that revealing the data could potentially “damage its reputation”.

A spokesperson for the university told The Tab that other universities submitting “low inaccurate rates as a result of their investigation” risked the university “suffering unwarranted reputational harm”.

Dr Richard Harvey, a professor of computer science at the University of East Anglia (UEA), says ChatGPT at present is “almost configured for cheating”.

The lecturer, who has removed an essay from a unit he is teaching next year over fears students could use the chatbot, says he has become very adept at identifying cheaters.

He said: “What I see is almost perfect grammar, and a stylistic construction that looks precisely like a 15-year-old schoolkid.

“It has a very deeply boring but beautifully done argumentation structure.”

Dr Andres Guadamuz, a reader in intellectual property law at the University of Sussex, is also well-versed in spotting AI-created work.

He explained he marked three essays in January which were “clearly almost just copy and paste” from ChatGPT however this was when he suspects “students maybe thought we wouldn’t know about it”.

He added: “The voice is very clear to me, I don’t know how to explain it other than it is very boring.

"Whenever you are reading essays, people can’t help but put a little bit of themselves in that essay, but with ChatGPT it has a very clear structure.

“It’s well written, don’t get me wrong, but it’s lacking something.”

New anti-cheating methods have also left tutors fearful of wrongly accusing students of cheating - potentially leaving students with an academically damaging stain on their student record.

One student at the University of Bolton was “wrongly flagged” according to an FOI request earlier this year.

Professor Fabio Arico, from the Centre for Higher Education Research Practice Policy and Scholarship at UEA, said: “If you actually catch a student and you claim the student has plagiarised and you use these detection tools in quite a ruthless way without actually thinking.

"You could end up applying penalties, up to an expulsion from an institution for something that hasn’t actually happened.

“That’s quite serious, I mean you are ruining people’s lives.

“Overall the mood is a bit better than six months ago. January is when I first started delivering training sessions for my colleagues and it was panic mode, firefighting, people asking ‘what are we going to do now?’.

“Concerns are becoming more mature than before, I have colleagues that come to one of my training sessions and are saying ‘oh my god, I didn’t realise that this was happening’ and you’ve got the other ones who are saying ‘this is so exciting’.

“I understand people being scared and people being afraid of change but hey this is our job, we need to train students for the world out there and we can’t just do things how we’ve been doing them for the past 30 years, it’s just not acceptable it’s as simple as that.”

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