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daniyasiddiqui
daniyasiddiquiFast Responder
Asked: 17/09/20252025-09-17T13:52:20+00:00 2025-09-17T13:52:20+00:00In: Education, News, Technology

What counts as cheating vs legitimate assistance when students use tools like ChatGPT?

cheating vs legitimate assistance

academichonestychatgptcheatinglegitimateassistancestudentethics
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    1. daniyasiddiqui
      daniyasiddiqui Fast Responder
      2025-09-17T14:08:37+00:00Added an answer on 17/09/2025 at 2:08 pm

       Why the Line Blurs Before, "cheating" was simpler to define: copying answers, plagiarizing a work, sneaking illegitimate notes onto a test. But with computer AI, it's getting cloudy. A student will prompt ChatGPT with an essay question, receive a good outline, make some minor adaptations, and submiRead more

       Why the Line Blurs

      Before, “cheating” was simpler to define: copying answers, plagiarizing a work, sneaking illegitimate notes onto a test. But with computer AI, it’s getting cloudy. A student will prompt ChatGPT with an essay question, receive a good outline, make some minor adaptations, and submit it. It looks on paper as though it were their own work. But is it? Did they read, think, and write—or did the machine do it all?

      That’s the magic of it: AI can be a calculator, a tutor, or a ghostwriter. Which role it fills is left to what a student does with it.

      When AI Seemingly Feels Like Actual Assistance

      • Brainstorming ideas: Allowing ChatGPT to plant ideas when stuck is like asking a friend for ideas. The student still needs to decide where to go.
      • Dissolve complicated concepts: When a physics or history concept is complicated to understand, having AI dissolve it for them into easier terms is tutoring, not cheating.
      • Practice skills: Students can practice questioning themselves with AI, restating notes, or simulating debates. It’s active learning, not cheating.
      • Polishing words: Requesting AI to proofread for grammar or make language more fluent is no different from spellcheck and Grammarly. The student’s thoughts in the text are still his or hers.

      AI is a helper system here. The student is still the only author of his or her thoughts, logic, and conclusions.

       When AI Blurs into Cheating

      Plagiarizing whole assignments: If the entirety or almost the entire assignment is done by AI with little to no contribution from a human, then the student is really skipping the learning process entirely.

      • Making answers on tests/quizzes: That is no different from cheating with illicit notes—it sabotages the test assumption.
      • Disguising the voice of AI as one’s own: When a student uses AI to compose “in their own voice” and presents it as original work, it’s really plagiarism—whether they copied a human or not.
      • Too much reliance on automation: If AI does all the thinking all the time, the student isn’t working on problem-solving, creativity, or critical thinking—the things learning is supposed to develop.

      Here, AI isn’t an assistant. It’s a substitute. And that negates the purpose of learning.

      Why Context Matters

      Assignments vs. learning objectives: If the assignment is thinking practice, then AI-written essays are cheating. If it’s clear communication, then working with AI as a language tool is okay.

      • Teachers’ expectations: Teachers might explicitly invite AI use as a research aid or study aid. Others do not. Students need to honor that boundary, even if they themselves don’t care.
      • Skill-building phase: A 12-year-old learning to build arguments likely shouldn’t be offloading writing to computer code. A graduate student is using AI to obtain citations, but then doing so might involve using common sense with tools.

      The Human Side

      Finally, the question is not “Is AI cheating?” but “Am I still learning?” Discriminating students who use ChatGPT can enhance understanding, save time, and feel in the process. Those who allow it to do their thinking for them may exhaust their own potential.

      The gray area will always be there. That’s why integrity is important: honesty in the use of AI, and why. Learning is optimal when teachers and students have trust, and the attention remains on development rather than grades.

      AI is excellent support when it augments your learning, but it cheats when it substitutes.

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