Words including 鈥渋mperfect鈥, 鈥渟crutinize鈥 and 鈥渁pparent鈥 are too advanced for a Year 12 student to use, according to artificial intelligence, and are considered evidence of plagiarism.
Here are other听
鈥淰ibrant counterparts; non-pastel location; better perceive; effectively conveying the intensity of; utilizing, emphasizing and realization [for their American spellings]; detrimental; induce; eventual; employed; and online presence.鈥
Despite being an excellence-level student, the girl鈥檚 teacher flagged her work as potentially plagiarised and fed it through ChatGPT.
, released in November last year, is an artificial intelligence chatbot that generates text.
鈥淭he AI checker suggested parts of her work were written by AI,鈥 Cambridge High School assistant principal Joanna Bartch told the girl鈥檚 mother.
鈥淸The excerpts from her work] indicate to us that AI software has been used by [student] in preparing her NCEA Internal Assessment.鈥
But the girl was adamant the work was her own, and her mother described the use of AI by teachers to detect plagiarism as 鈥淩ussian roulette鈥 of infallibility.
Last week, the听贬别谤补濒诲听reported the girl鈥檚 story, along with that of another student of Pukekohe High School. Countless concerned parents and educators have since shared similar examples.
鈥淚 am sure that you will agree that the words ... are not suspicious or remarkable words. My daughter has an excellent and well-developed vocabulary. She is mature, articulate and a prolific reader,鈥 her mother said.
The phrases were from the girl鈥檚 NCEA Level 2 English assessment: 鈥淎nalyse significant aspects of an extract from a film.鈥
The girl at the centre of the major cheating allegation chose to analyse an episode of听Black Mirror听- a British television show about 鈥減eople grappling with the manipulative effects of cutting-edge technology鈥, according to a description online.
Experts have said the availability of AI tools has made 鈥渢he opportunity for cheating and all manner of misconduct ... seemingly endless鈥.
Educational technologist Francis Valintine told the听贬别谤补濒诲听following our first report about the allegations last week that it would be dangerous if education authorities began accusing people of using AI to cheat when it wasn鈥檛 always accurate.
鈥淭here is no 100 per cent certainty on any tool whatsoever and nobody is claiming to have that magic tool,鈥 Valintine said.
The girl鈥檚 mother told the听贬别谤补濒诲:听鈥淥bviously [the school] were realising they had to deal with this artificial intelligence, which undoubtedly some children will be using - my daughter knows people that have.
鈥淏ut what bothers me is that ChatGPT is so unreliable and yet it鈥檚 the screening method [for work], so, you know, undoubtedly they鈥檙e going to call kids out incorrectly,鈥 she said.
鈥淗ow is she going to feel every time she hands something in now that your robot is going to accuse her of being artificially intelligent?鈥
NZQA advised schools about the use of artificial intelligence in February - noting the arrival of ChatGPT was ringing alarm bells in the education sector.
鈥淎t worst, the chatbot can produce quality essays, reports, etc on any topic, which might escape detection by regular plagiarism checks and be passed off as the student鈥檚 work,鈥 NZQA said.
NZQA lists three programmes schools could use to detect plagiarism - AI Writing Check, AICheatCheck and Turnitin - which have already been used in schools and universities.
But NZQA also said it could be 鈥渘igh on impossible鈥 to stop students from using AI tech.
NZQA deputy chief executive of assessment Jann Marshall said they don鈥檛 tell schools exactly how they should check whether work was authentic.
鈥淲hile AI detection tools are developing quickly and can be useful, they are not infallible,鈥 Marshall said.
Cambridge High School principal Greg Thornton said the school鈥檚 procedures were in line with official guidance.
鈥淲e review each student鈥檚 work using teacher judgment. Only the scripts that are not considered to potentially be a student鈥檚 own work are further investigated,鈥 he said.
Thornton said teacher judgment involved looking at students鈥 previous work and their 鈥渙verall performance鈥 in class.
He wouldn鈥檛 comment on the specific case involving the student but did outline the school鈥檚 process for dealing with potential plagiarism.
鈥淚t is not appropriate to discuss [the mother鈥檚] concerns at this time as I am currently engaging with her in accordance with our concerns and complaints procedure,鈥 Thornton said.
The girl鈥檚 mother doubted how accurate any teacher鈥檚 judgement of her daughter鈥檚 work was: 鈥淭he professional judgement was unreliable as her English teacher is a first-year teacher [with] 11 weeks鈥 experience.
鈥淣o doubt this is the first assessment [the teacher] has marked,鈥 she said.
鈥淸The head of English] also does not think the words are likely for a Year 12 student. However, given [she] then confirmed she has never met or had a conversation with my daughter, or referred to any of her previous work, I don鈥檛 consider [her] to hold any relevant judgement.
鈥淎lso ... ChatGPT is now widely known and recognised as unreliable, dangerous, inconsistent, full of falsehoods. And that is exactly what I have been told from within your own teaching staff,鈥 she said.
When the听贬别谤补濒诲听asked ChatGPT - directly - if it could detect whether work was plagiarised, the computer programme offered this response: 鈥淚 can certainly help detect plagiarism in a piece of writing.鈥
鈥淗owever,鈥 it continued, 鈥渋t鈥檚 important to note that I don鈥檛 have access to every possible source of information, so my analysis might not be exhaustive. Additionally, while I can flag passages that match other sources, it鈥檚 ultimately up to a human evaluator to determine whether or not the similarities constitute plagiarism.鈥
Principal investigator of the Research on Academic Integrity in New Zealand (Rainz) Project and University of Auckland associate professor Jason Stephens has researched cheating for two decades.
Stephens said the problem was artificial intelligence tools had 鈥渁rrived overnight鈥.
鈥淭his isn鈥檛 just a technological development, it鈥檚 a technological revolution,鈥 the said.
鈥淚n education, this means rethinking not only how we teach and assess learning, but what we are teaching and assessing for.鈥
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