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<p>And you know this how. Why would they want you to know they cheated on a test much more important than an average high school one.</p>
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<p>Cheating isn’t a matter of morality in the same manner as drinking underage.</p>
<p><a href=“1”>quote=Poseur</a> In fourth grade, I looked at someone else’s test to see where she was because I wasn’t sure if I was working quickly enough. Not only was I way ahead of her, but I also noticed that she got the question that she was working on incorrect.
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<p>This isn’t really cheating, especially if you didn’t share information. Besides, I cheated in fourth grade too. Then I matured.</p>
<p><a href=“2”>quote=Poseur</a> Several (maybe 5-10) times in my high school career, I’ve forgotten to do a worksheet for homework and copied someone else’s (these are assignments checked for completion, not graded.)
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<p>This isn’t cheating in a sense I hate (it isn’t really cheating). You shouldn’t lose points for a course because you forgot to do a such small task. You should lose points for not knowing the material relevant to the course.</p>
<p><a href=“3”>quote=Poseur</a> One time, my friend who sits next to me was looking at my Calculus test, and he notified me of a dumb addition mistake I’d made that he had caught while checking his work against mine. I didn’t ask; he volunteered the information. I corrected it.
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<p>Why didn’t you tell him that he shouldn’t be looking at your test? And why did you change it? I’ve looked at other people’s tests on ones I didn’t know, then decided to not fill them in because I didn’t know it. You could have done the same. Its not like your grade would have suffered.</p>
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<p>If you don’t approve of it, why do you facilitate it?</p>
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<p>Or you could explain it to them without giving them the answer, like I do. It helps them even more.</p>
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<p>The fact they need to cheat on simple high school tests that should be easy for someone of their intellectual capacity brings into question the actual extent of this aforementioned capacity.</p>