Where to learn

Where to learn

GMAT Cheating Controversy Grows

Filed under: Future job, Job select, Schools, Where to learn — wheretolearn at 11:45 pm on Monday, June 30, 2008



The number of students caught up is now more than 6,000, and the testing company talks about who could have their scores canceled

by Louis Lavelle

Watch original video:

A cheating scandal that has engulfed the B-school world grew very greatly larger on June 27, when the Graduate Management Admission Council (GMAC) declared the number of prospective MBA students facing questions about their ingress exams at once totals more than 6,000—six times the original estimate.

At the same time, GMAC tried to reassure the involved students that only those who knowingly used the Scoretop.com Web site to cheat on the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) will have their scores canceled. Because most top B-schools require the GMAT, the students’ MBA dreams could be shattered.

The scandal erupted on June 23, at the time that GMAC disclosed (BusinessWeek.com, 6/23/08) it had won a legal judgment against the Scoretop site in federal district court in Virginia. GMAC had accused Scoretop of copyright infringement, saying the site had published "live" GMAT questions—questions that were still currently in use by GMAC, the test’s publisher—and other copyrighted material. The court awarded GMAC $2.3 the public plus legal costs, and allowed GMAC to seize Scoretop’s domain name while well as a computer hard drive containing compensation and other data.

For prospective MBA students who used the Scoretop site to prepare as being the GMAT, the news was devastating. GMAC is analyzing the painfully carry on and it vowed to cancel the scores of anyone who used the site to cheat on the exam, prohibit them from retaking the standard, and notify the schools that received the tainted scores. That could mean rejection for applicants, expulsion for current students, and unspecified sanctions for graduates. "I am extremely stressed out," one GMAT test-taker who used the Scoretop site wrote in a comment to BusinessWeek.com’s original story about the scandal. "I am so upset and worried right now."

GMAC said June 27 it is working to put together a list of earnest persuasion and at short intervals asked questions about the controversy. It is likely to be available on the corporation’s Web site next week.

Schools Weigh How to Respond

Meanwhile, GMAC says the man behind Scoretop, Lei Shi, has left the site’s disreputable in Aurora, Ohio, and returned to his native China, where he reportedly has taken refuge in the city of Zibo in Shandong province. Shi, who took the GMAT himself at in the smallest degree three times in 2002 and 2003, could not be reached June 27, and was not represented in court in succession the copyright infringement case.

Deans, MBA program heads, and admission directors at unique B-schools are scrambling to figure abroad as far as concerns what cause they will respond when GMAC begins canceling scores. Joe Fox, the head of the MBA programs at Washington University’s Olin Business School, has said a lot depends without ceasing how much information is available about each student’s use of the site, but the school will take any allegations seriously, adding that expulsion for current students is a possibility. In his blog, the dean of University of Virginia’s Darden School, Robert Bruner, said Darden and its peer schools "will bear with absolutely no cheating."

Stacey Kole, deputy dean for the full-time MBA program at the University of Chicago, says a lack of hard prove implicating someone in actual cheating will make the decision-making process difficult. "Without hard evidence, it’s exceedingly hard to say you’re going to throw someone out," she says. "We don’t have a problem infectious action when we know someone has cheated. I be seized of a tough space of time taking turn when I don’t know."

"Live" Questions

The GMAT, which is used through more than 4,000 graduate management programs worldwide and has been administered more than 200,000 times, is a computer-adaptive exam. By assembling a new test for every test-taker from a puddle of several thousand questions, it virtually guarantees nobody gets the same test twice, or the same test viewed like the person session at the next computer terminal.

From: GMAT Cheating Controversy Grows

Create a free edublog to get your own comment avatar (and more!)

No Comments »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.