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Education The Courts AI

School Did Nothing Wrong When It Punished Student For Using AI, Court Rules 65

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: A federal court yesterday ruled against parents who sued a Massachusetts school district for punishing their son who used an artificial intelligence tool to complete an assignment. Dale and Jennifer Harris sued Hingham High School officials and the School Committee and sought a preliminary injunction requiring the school to change their son's grade and expunge the incident from his disciplinary record before he needs to submit college applications. The parents argued that there was no rule against using AI in the student handbook, but school officials said the student violated multiple policies.

The Harris' motion for an injunction was rejected in an order (PDF) issued yesterday from US District Court for the District of Massachusetts. US Magistrate Judge Paul Levenson found that school officials "have the better of the argument on both the facts and the law."

"On the facts, there is nothing in the preliminary factual record to suggest that HHS officials were hasty in concluding that RNH [the Harris' son, referred to by his initials] had cheated," Levenson wrote. "Nor were the consequences Defendants imposed so heavy-handed as to exceed Defendants' considerable discretion in such matters." "On the evidence currently before the Court, I detect no wrongdoing by Defendants," Levenson also wrote.
"The manner in which RNH used Grammarly -- wholesale copying and pasting of language directly into the draft script that he submitted -- powerfully supports Defendants' conclusion that RNH knew that he was using AI in an impermissible fashion," Levenson wrote. While "the emergence of generative AI may present some nuanced challenges for educators, the issue here is not particularly nuanced, as there is no discernible pedagogical purpose in prompting Grammarly (or any other AI tool) to generate a script, regurgitating the output without citation, and claiming it as one's own work," the order said.

Levenson concluded with a quote from a 1988 Supreme Court ruling that said the education of youth "is primarily the responsibility of parents, teachers, and state and local school officials, and not of federal judges." According to Levenson, "This case well illustrates the good sense in that division of labor. The public interest here weighs in favor of Defendants."

School Did Nothing Wrong When It Punished Student For Using AI, Court Rules

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  • How stupid? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by jenningsthecat ( 1525947 ) on Thursday November 21, 2024 @10:43PM (#64964001)

    "The manner in which RNH used Grammarly -- wholesale copying and pasting of language directly into the draft script that he submitted -- powerfully supports Defendants' conclusion that RNH knew that he was using AI in an impermissible fashion

    It's pretty incredible that a High School student is so stupid as to not at least re-word what the LLM provided. Never mind the cheating aspect of what he did, although that's bad enough. But that degree of witlessness, at that age, does not bode well for him being able to function in any job requiring intellectual sophistication, analytical ability, or even just basic common sense.

    Additionally, those lawsuit-filing parents need to take a good long look in the mirror, get a fucking clue, and ask themselves if their precious bundle of joy came out of the womb with such intellectual deficits or if their parenting was simply that bad.

    This kid may be salvageable, but Mom and Dad need to stop enabling their son and get him some help that doesn't come from a lawyer or from an LLM being used as a substitute for thinking and learning.

    • Re-wording the LLM would take time and effort, and I'm guessing Junior, here, waited until the last second to turn in the report - rather like a lot of us did as kids - and time wasn't a luxury he possessed. But, yeah, the parents kinda suck, here. My kid would've taken the F for a stunt like that.
    • by allo ( 1728082 )

      Isn't Grammarly just a better spellcheck?

      • by Rei ( 128717 )

        It does have some "advanced" capabilities, like rewording and offering feedback, but yeah. It's not ChatGPT.

    • by JBMcB ( 73720 )

      My son is the editor of his school paper, and he rejected a submission by a writer that was clearly AI generated. Beyond the janky prose, the smoking gun was the use of an em dash, only available on school computers by hitting ALT-0151. The newspaper class is pass/fail, and you only have one assignment per semester, so that student failed the class.

      The maddening thing, he said, was that it was a puffball piece the student could have wrote in one class period. It's one of the easiest classes, if you can writ

      • If you are using Word, it is a lot easier than that to enter an em dash. Sometimes, it will autocorrect a regular dash to an em dash, or you can do Ctrl+Alt+[Numeric keypad -] to get it.

      • by Zak3056 ( 69287 )

        the smoking gun was the use of an em dash, only available on school computers by hitting ALT-0151.

        Microsoft Word replaces inline "--" with em dash. So does Google Docs, as does Pages (at least on ios). Janky prose aside, if your son actually called that out as the smoking gun he has no business being an editor.

        • the smoking gun was the use of an em dash, only available on school computers by hitting ALT-0151.

          Microsoft Word replaces inline "--" with em dash. So does Google Docs, as does Pages (at least on ios). Janky prose aside, if your son actually called that out as the smoking gun he has no business being an editor.

          Add Libre Office to that list as well.

    • ...and definitely don't get the kid a BMW for his birthday. It would only seal his fate.

  • by pierceelevated ( 5484374 ) on Thursday November 21, 2024 @10:54PM (#64964011)

    All the administrators I've worked with cave in at the slightest threat of legal action. That this school had the integrity to fight the lawsuit indicates its students should be proud to study there.

    • ... cave-in at the slightest threat ...

      What's the alternative? If they give cheats the highest grade or even, a passing grade, there's no incentive for any student to be honest. They may as well, close the school.

      • What's the alternative?

        I think quite often it's the worst thing possible. To ignore it but then to find ways to manipulate down the suspected cheats marks. I was very early using printed out papers on a computer. One year I got a pretty bad mark for a school paper that I thought was okay. The next year, I had an actual external examiner for a science paper (not normal in the UK). After talking to me he gave me a great mark. I heard from my teacher, though, that he'd looked and to begin with thought I'd copied it from a journal an

  • When a student cheats you arnt learning a skill go progress to the next step and whether you get caught or not, it only ends up hurting them. When the parents are reinforcing the behavior, its never likely they will ever correct that and do anything but look for a shortcut which will ultimately hurt them and everyone working around them. Its too bad the school doesnt have the gonads to step up and stop this before it becomes common place, but that is "education" today.
    • When a student cheats you arnt learning a skill go progress to the next step and whether you get caught or not, it only ends up hurting them. When the parents are reinforcing the behavior, its never likely they will ever correct that and do anything but look for a shortcut which will ultimately hurt them and everyone working around them.

      In other words, he's a prime candidate for a high-powered Wall Street job!

  • it is plagiarizing a copypasta from an AI and not citing a source.

    • it is plagiarizing a copypasta from an AI and not citing a source.

      You technically can't plagiarize a LLM's output because it isn't copyrightable in the first place. So, it really does fall under the category of cheating rather than failing to give credit to the original author.

      Of course, this situation will probably only last until some company like Disney creates something of actual value using AI, then all bets are off.

      • by mysidia ( 191772 )

        You technically can't plagiarize a LLM's output because it isn't copyrightable in the first place.

        Plagiarism is not copyright infringement; it's an academic moral offense not a legal one.
        Plagiarism covers "passing off ideas as your own" which are not even copyrightable in the first place. You cannot copyright an idea.

        It is plagiarism if you copy a work or ideas from a work without citing: Schools have even considered it plagiarism if it's our own work that you copied!

        Using the same essay you created for

    • Did the student follow the rules of the assignment and school? No. The kid cheated.

      The parent's need to own up to the fact they failed as a parent and then reinforced that parenting failure for everyone to see by suing the school. Such a family is obviously a mess with no morals.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Now that Microsoft 365 ships with Copilot by default enabled without any option to disable it, this includes Family, Personal, and Student editions I am not sure schools can easily mandate that a student must not use AI at any level of education.

    Especially when many educational facilities require Microsoft compatible formats which OpenOffice and LibreOffice do not quite achieve.

  • Homework assignments essentially operate on an honour system, i.e. the student declares that the work they are submitting is all their own. Running an honour system in a high-stakes environment with kids who haven't yet learnt the importance of behaving responsibly, you know, the kind where parents are likely to sue the school if their kid gets bad grades, doesn't sound like the best of ideas to me.

    Schools & other educational institutions need find another way to ensure that their students are assess

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