A Guardian investigation has uncovered that nearly 7,000 UK university students were caught cheating using AI tools like ChatGPT in the 2023-24 academic year, marking a significant rise from previous years as traditional plagiarism declines. The true scale of AI-enabled cheating is likely far higher, with both detection and regulation lagging behind the spread of these technologies. Many universities do not yet track AI misuse as a discrete violation, while students commonly use AI for brainstorming, structuring, or even rewriting assignments to evade detection. Experts caution that education must adapt assessment strategies and focus more on skills that AI cannot easily replicate, as technology companies target students and some learners with disabilities find AI particularly helpful. The rise of AI in academia presents an evolving challenge for educators, regulators, and policymakers.
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