Yes. Me and my friend Hector in 10th grade Science. It was the final. Our desks were in the front, the teacher saw us, and we had to turn in our test papers before the test had hardly even started. He flunked us both on the final, and I got a D in the class.
She forgot to cover the ABC banner with various German words that started with the letter and an image. All the vocab translations were on the banner. Her fault, not ours.
there were only a few exams I wasn't cheating in (English mostly) but even then I was a part of cheating cuz like 3 other ppl were copying my answers :D
Oh my best friend geography... I was sat next to a close friend, an amazing geographistasisty, how couldn't I? It was a bit of a shame (for her) when the results came back and I got 10% more than she did :S
Once. I believed (then and now) that the professor's requirement was nuts and shouldn't have been allowed.
We had to draw -- freehand - a map of Europe and locate a list of places. Well, I can't draw. Period. I couldn't see what would be lost by his giving us a blank map and the list. So I sketched a few lines and filled the rest in in the exam. His notes included a comment that my map was very bad -- I felt like telling him it would have been worse if I hadn't cheated. But I didn't think that would go over well. I did go to him and tell him I thought his requirement was unreasonable; he explained his reasoning, and I said I understood -- but I thought he placed unfair extra stress on people like me who can't draw and that if cartography was a criterion for success in his course, he should (1) put it in the course description and (2) tell us on the first day so we could practice. We didn't part friends. :)
I have take some very difficult exams and tests in my lifetime. If you are not prepared then you accept the consequences. Cheating is not really a good thing, ever. If you do and pass then I would not tell anyone about it. How could anyone be proud if you did not earn it ?
I think if you can find a way to cheat the system, then you deserve better grades. :-)
We had to draw -- freehand - a map of Europe and locate a list of places. Well, I can't draw. Period. I couldn't see what would be lost by his giving us a blank map and the list. So I sketched a few lines and filled the rest in in the exam. His notes included a comment that my map was very bad -- I felt like telling him it would have been worse if I hadn't cheated. But I didn't think that would go over well. I did go to him and tell him I thought his requirement was unreasonable; he explained his reasoning, and I said I understood -- but I thought he placed unfair extra stress on people like me who can't draw and that if cartography was a criterion for success in his course, he should (1) put it in the course description and (2) tell us on the first day so we could practice. We didn't part friends. :)
Exactly!
who didn't :O !!