- #1
Eclair_de_XII
- 1,083
- 91
In some classes that I have taken in university, it's become sort of a common practice for instructors to allow students to create cheat-sheets that they can refer to while taking tests. They claim that the process of creating this cheat-sheet will allow students to help remember what they must in order to pass the test in question, even if they don't use it at all when taking the test. Some of the classmates I have had classes where this is allowed have made cheat-sheets containing entire solutions to homework problems, even. Although he/she discourages it because it will make it harder for students to find what they are looking for while taking the test, the instructor still allows it. And I wonder to myself why they are so lax when allowing students this privilege. Is my school not really serious about learning? Do my instructors expect the students to cheat anyway, which is why they want to supervise said "cheating"? Or maybe is this a new-generation college trend? Is it just my professors who have done this?