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Should universities bring back in-person exams to tackle AI?

83 replies

Jaxx · 07/06/2026 12:26

From the Speccie:
Why isn’t Durham University taking AI cheating seriously?

At Durham University, I have been Chair of the Board of Examiners for Philosophy since 2016. Last week I resigned, because I feel that it is my responsibility to raise a vital issue in higher education, one whose true significance is not understood. The existence of a crisis requiring immediate action is not generally recognised. I am not blaming the deans and pro-vice-chancellors. I want to hold the appropriate figures to account: the Vice-Chancellors.

Durham University is a beacon of excellence in the UK university sector. I wish to maintain standards in its top-rated Philosophy department. The issue I am addressing affects students past, present and future, in many leading British universities. It involves a crime that is not victimless. It is this: the lazy student cheats with professional-grade versions of AI chatbots such as ChatGPT or Claude, and gets a first-class result. The hard-working student uses no bots, or a non-professional bot honestly, thinking and writing for themselves, but gets a 2:1. That’s not fair. Yet Vice-Chancellors – to mix metaphors – are sitting on their lavishly-remunerated backsides and adopting the ostrich position.

Let me explain how the university marking system works, at least in the UK. Until Covid, there was a mix of assessment by sit-down exam and continuous assessment. During Covid, this was replaced, for understandable reasons, by “at home” exams done on computer – to the relief of academics who no longer had to decipher student handwriting. After Covid this continued, and worked satisfactorily. A system called Turnitin would check for plagiarism by scanning essays for text compiled from published sources, and it was hard to cheat.

That system has been subverted by ChatGPT and similar AI tools. These apps now work very well for producing university-style essays and essay components, especially in the professional version which many Durham students can afford. (You see that there is discrimination already against working-class students. What a surprise.)

A return to sit-down exams is the obvious solution. Universities say that these are financially impractical for various reasons. I doubt this, but in any case it is too late at Durham and elsewhere to implement sit-downs exams this year. (They should have been implemented a year ago.) So in response to the immediate crisis I must suggest sticking plaster solutions. I am old enough to recall the introduction of anonymous marking, which happened because research showed that female students were discriminated against. Now, when the alternative is what I call a chaotic system of guesswork, it may be our least-worst immediate alternative.

AI, in contrast, is now often impractical to detect with enough reliability to meet the high standards of proof required for accusations of cheating. Perhaps there is no ultimate alternative to sit-down exams – other options such as vivas are very time-consuming. My suggestion of abandoning anonymous marking seems a reasonable sticking plaster. We need an immediate response to the unfairness in the coming exam season. Yet most of my colleagues don’t seem to understand how it is fairer.

The buck stops with VCs, who should be exercising leadership. Obviously students who cheat are behaving badly – but the point is that the system allows them to do so with ease. Students have always cheated, but now they know they can do so with impunity.

I have been an academic since 1988, and worked at Durham University since 1991. I’ve been very lucky to get a job at Durham – and privileged. The students are excellent, the university is well-known and generally well-run. Any student who gets a place here will be both excellent academically, and well-set for future employment. Academic work is the only full-time employment I’ve had, after a series of temporary jobs as a student, and taking a PGCE course at Moray House Edinburgh (Primary). But now, shortly before retirement, I find that the skills I’ve developed as a marker – essential to my teaching role – aren’t able to be put to their proper use. Much effort is being expended by academics in working out how to identify the improper use of AI. But this vain pursuit is becoming very difficult and may soon be impossible. AI “tells” that remain are being aggressively stamped out by AI companies. One cannot mark essays under the Covid system, in the era of ChatGPT. Yet the university leadership is still in the ostrich position.

I was on research leave for the first term this academic year; Durham still operates a term system. Since then I have chaired one disciplinary panel for AI cheating, detected by the junior colleague who marked it. He noticed that the referencing contained tell-tale signs of AI “hallucinations”. This AI “tell” can prove misuse, as has happened in a number of high-profile cases. But AI makers have reduced its frequency, and cheaters can cover their tracks by minimally checking or omitting references. With existing tools, AI cheating is almost impossible to prove except by student confession. Stylistic cues, incongruous sophistication or maturity of writing for an undergrad cannot reliably show that AI has been misused, even when the marker is suspicious. Only with the last batch of essays which I started marking in April, did the true horrors of the situation become apparent to me. The system was broken and needed immediate emergency repair.

It should be clear that my complaint is not against Durham University. Few British universities have re-introduced sit-down exams extensively. Many departments have never had anonymisation; music, for obvious reasons. I know from bitter experience that one cannot play the piano with a paper bag over one’s head. Universities seem unable to respond in a timely manner to the current crisis. Academics are grumbling. Someone surely has to blow the whistle?

I guess that few whistle-blowers are enthusiastic. I have never engaged in a lawsuit, or been the victim of one, on any matter. A cursory Google search reveals that UK whistleblower laws protect my salary and pension, and I’ll get a hundred quid for this article. So I’m prepared to light the blue touchpaper and retire, in both senses.

It has been a very difficult decision to get this article published. Colleagues will be upset, and students disconcerted. But should they continue in ignorance? There needs to be quick action – something that large institutions such as universities have never been known for. Think of Air Chief Marshal Dowding in 1940, confronted with massive losses of planes in France. He goes to Winston Churchill and says that we cannot send any more Hurricanes and Spitfires there. But instead of reluctantly agreeing, Churchill sets up a cabinet committee to investigate, and committees in parliament. By the time they report, Britain is being invaded. I think I would be on Dowding’s side in that debate.

The imperative is the wellbeing of students who are suffering under the present system, though they don’t realise it. Staff in UK universities, and elsewhere, are not able to mark with the integrity the matter demands, because there is no sufficiently reliable way of detecting or preventing improper use of AI. Academics are doing their best, but as one young colleague said to me, “We are fighting with our hands tied behind our backs”.

Cromwell’s immortal words to the Rump Parliament apply to the current generation of VCs: “You have sat too long here for any good you have been doing lately…Depart, I say, and let us have done with you. In the name of God, go!” We need an equivalent of the mani pulite movement in Italian politics – one that does not end with a Berlusconi.

by Andy Hamilton, Professor of Philosophy and former Chair of Board of Examiners at Durham University

Full disclosure, my son is at Durham doing an humanities degree and I totally agree there should be a return to in person degrees for all exams. He doesn’t use AI to write essays tbf, but does use it to help plan, find sources and check his work acting on recommendations he agrees with.

OP posts:
poetryandwine · 07/06/2026 15:20

Edit: my post was for @MotherofPufflings

Elbowpatch · 07/06/2026 15:31

unistress · 07/06/2026 12:41

Not that it's only about Durham, but since that is the focus of the article it's relevant to mention that Oxbridge still does in person exams so if they want to maintain the Doxbridge moniker surely Durham should lead the way in this.

Soon we may have to go the way of the Indian army entrance exams. Candidates sat in a field spaced ten feet apart in their underwear.

JulietteHasAGun · 07/06/2026 18:23

To be honest exams are the tip of the iceberg. A lot of courses/modules are essays rather than exams. Maybe the subject doesn’t lend itself to exams? I’d have thought a history degree would be more essay based than exams? AI will be used for written essay assignments.

Universities need to look at how to combat that. So exams, vivas, poster presentations. Problem with the last two is that they’re very staff intensive which if you have made half of your academics redundant will be a hard to manage.

Notanorthener · 07/06/2026 19:02

Bravo Professor Hamilton indeed.

There’s been a lot of discussion on AI use on the thread about assessment methods at Top 10 Unis. I was surprised and shocked by how many top unis use mainly coursework type assessments and ignore AI use - and lots of posters thought that was ok, either because AI is used in the workplace or because they don’t like/value in person exams.

However, a bit like democracy, in person exams may well be the least worst option.

Elbowpatch · 07/06/2026 19:10

Notanorthener · 07/06/2026 19:02

Bravo Professor Hamilton indeed.

There’s been a lot of discussion on AI use on the thread about assessment methods at Top 10 Unis. I was surprised and shocked by how many top unis use mainly coursework type assessments and ignore AI use - and lots of posters thought that was ok, either because AI is used in the workplace or because they don’t like/value in person exams.

However, a bit like democracy, in person exams may well be the least worst option.

”Top” universities using coursework for assessment don’t necessarily ignore AI. I was musing on this yesterday. As a direct result of students abusing AI, there has been a huge increase in the time staff spend on academic conduct panels.

Fees might have to rise.

Pacificsunshine · 07/06/2026 19:47

Elbowpatch · 07/06/2026 19:10

”Top” universities using coursework for assessment don’t necessarily ignore AI. I was musing on this yesterday. As a direct result of students abusing AI, there has been a huge increase in the time staff spend on academic conduct panels.

Fees might have to rise.

Wouldn’t it be better to spend the time on oral exams, small group tutorials using the socratic method, etc. rather than sticking with essays and then spending energy and time chasing and proving the guilt of students.

poetryandwine · 07/06/2026 19:56

Notanorthener · 07/06/2026 19:02

Bravo Professor Hamilton indeed.

There’s been a lot of discussion on AI use on the thread about assessment methods at Top 10 Unis. I was surprised and shocked by how many top unis use mainly coursework type assessments and ignore AI use - and lots of posters thought that was ok, either because AI is used in the workplace or because they don’t like/value in person exams.

However, a bit like democracy, in person exams may well be the least worst option.

I like your characterisation of in person exams as the least worst option.

Oxford History students are required to sit a number of traditional timed papers in examinations halls. The ample feedback on their many essays over the years prepare them well for these. As the essays do not count for much by way of explicit credit, using AI inappropriately only hurts the perpetrator. And tutorial will unmask those students who do not understand their own work.

I agree with you completely that AI is being used inappropriately for essays, projects and dissertations. We viva the latter two, but at UG and MSc level the weighting of the viva is not high enough to fail someone if it reveals they don’t know what they are talking about (for any reason). As PP and Prof Hamilton have said, bringing a watertight case proving use of AI is currently very difficult unless there are hallucinated references, which the best AI does not do and the better students know to check for.

physicsatcambridge · 07/06/2026 20:29

I studied physics at Cambridge, well before AI. Even then, all my practicals had to be written up in the lab. In my third year, I had three pieces of coursework (a longer practical project, a literature review and a computing project). Each of these was viva'd, as was my fourth year research project. So even twenty-odd years ago, Cambridge reckoned that cheating was too tempting, and had a solution for 'coursework'. But vivas are expensive....

CurdinHenry · 07/06/2026 20:30

They need to introduce oral exams as on the continent to tackle the various other forms of cheating

Elbowpatch · 07/06/2026 20:35

Pacificsunshine · 07/06/2026 19:47

Wouldn’t it be better to spend the time on oral exams, small group tutorials using the socratic method, etc. rather than sticking with essays and then spending energy and time chasing and proving the guilt of students.

My field is STEM. I don’t have much experience of essays as a method of assessment, I’m afraid.

Denim4ever · 07/06/2026 20:36

unistress · 07/06/2026 12:41

Not that it's only about Durham, but since that is the focus of the article it's relevant to mention that Oxbridge still does in person exams so if they want to maintain the Doxbridge moniker surely Durham should lead the way in this.

Cambridge have only just begun in person exams again. They have some sort of system where students can use their own laptops.

DS is at a London uni, exams there are in person and on paper or university owned laptop for exam use for those who need to type. But there is a lot of coursework. I think unis can tell if thought is not original.

Mumofmarauders · 07/06/2026 20:38

CurdinHenry · 07/06/2026 20:30

They need to introduce oral exams as on the continent to tackle the various other forms of cheating

I’ve long thought this, and I would love to see it where I work (but I bet they won’t. Too expensive in terms of staff time).

Not an appealing name to our ears but the system of in-class “interrogation” by the teacher which was part of the Italian assessment system when I was there seems such a sensible way to do this in a low-key, regular way (rather than everything depending upon one end of year oral exam which would probably disadvantage some students).

Owlbookend · Yesterday 08:23

poetryandwine · 07/06/2026 15:17

As Prof Hamilton characterised de-anonymisation as ‘a sticking plaster’, I think he may have been suggesting using it this year, in which case I think you are correct.

My question is, what then? Are the authors of suspect papers called in for vivas? That definitely exposes them and I am all in favour, but those who will cheat like this tend to be cognisant of their rights and I do not know how requiring selective vivas would stand up on appeal. As we have shifted towards the notion of students as consumers, many universities have gotten more lenient.

As PP have said, it is very difficult to make a rigorous case against the improper use of AI without a confession (or a load of hallucinated references)

The Office of the Independent Adjudicator HE, the highest appeals body in HE for England and Wales, has a mixed record on this. It has upheld at least some student complaints around selective vivas for suspected AI use. My impression is that when this happens, the student has successfully presented the viva as discriminatory and focused the issue away from the question of their guilt. But that is inferential.

At a minimum for selective vivas to be upheld i would imagine you would need it to be written into the assessment policy including some concrete description of what would trigger it. Even if you did that I can think of ways students could challenge it. You are then faced with what you would do with the viva result. Is it to substantiate an AI impropriety accusation? If so how is that operationalised? If levels of written performance and oral performance are incongruent the student could say it was nerves not because AI was used. If the mark is just modified because of the viva performance, students will say this is unequitable unless all students have a viva. Vivas are massively resource intensive. Administrations (& some academics) are not going to be keen. There is also the issue of reasonable adjustments for SEND that impact oral communication.
None of this is to disagree with anything @poetryandwine says. It is just emphasising that there are no easy answers. In person exams can play a role & have a purpose, but they dont assess some skills well. Most degrees will include a research project where in stem and social sciences their is data collection - you cant do this in an exam hall. I do find it very grim how assessments now have to consider how to be robust to AI. It really impacts on things - in person exams are robust and are excellent for some skills and material, but they really arent ideal for some others

Owlbookend · Yesterday 08:37

I have to be honest, but i dont understand how the removal of anonymous marking would really help challenge improper AI use. I cannot think of a way that this information could be used to support an AI case in a way that wouldn't be subject to challenge.
Informed and resourced students (& frankly parents) who have paid 30k+ are not going to accept sanctions that will prevent graduation or impact degree class when appeals and challenges are possible.
There is a difference between very strongly suspecting improper use of AI and being able to substantiate a case of academic impropriety that will be upheld if appeals are made. The time investment of attempting to do so is significant.

AmaryllisNightAndDay · Yesterday 08:44

It doesn't have to be paper and a pen. My university has some exams in a roomful of computers on campus running locked down software. Answers are typed. Essay answers can then be managed online and distributed to human markers. Different answer styles can be managed in different ways - still have auto-marking for multiple choice or numeric questions - so it's very efficient.

There's no one-size-fits-all solution and coursework is a problem. We're not going to get all the solutions right away. Not over-assessing is part of the solution; if you don't over-assess then you can spend more time getting the assessment right.

MotherofPufflings · Yesterday 08:50

Owlbookend · Yesterday 08:37

I have to be honest, but i dont understand how the removal of anonymous marking would really help challenge improper AI use. I cannot think of a way that this information could be used to support an AI case in a way that wouldn't be subject to challenge.
Informed and resourced students (& frankly parents) who have paid 30k+ are not going to accept sanctions that will prevent graduation or impact degree class when appeals and challenges are possible.
There is a difference between very strongly suspecting improper use of AI and being able to substantiate a case of academic impropriety that will be upheld if appeals are made. The time investment of attempting to do so is significant.

Exactly. And if someone is using AI in an exam then they will almost certainly be using it in coursework too, so the exam essays will feel consistent with this.

AmaryllisNightAndDay · Yesterday 08:56

Though I do fantasise about a world in which academics use AI to mark essays which students have written using AI and we all spend our time picking flowers in the sunshine.

Elbowpatch · Yesterday 08:57

Some universities have two stage process where AI abuse is strongly suspected. If suspected, the student has what is effectively a preliminary viva. The outcome of that determines whether or not the case is passed on to an academic conduct panel.

The viva does not affect the mark.

JulietteHasAGun · Yesterday 09:06

AmaryllisNightAndDay · Yesterday 08:56

Though I do fantasise about a world in which academics use AI to mark essays which students have written using AI and we all spend our time picking flowers in the sunshine.

Do you mean you’re not doing this already? 😆

CheeryOchreCat · Yesterday 09:13

Where I work (RG uni, humanities department), in person exams have now returned for all year groups. But there is still a substantial coursework component, mostly essays, because of the nature of our subject. And these are wide open to AI abuse. I had a student write two solid coursework essays and then absolutely FLOP the handwritten exam (think half a page response to one question, then not attempting the final two questions). Looking back, it was painfully apparent they had used AI in the essays, but there was nothing obvious when marking.

In addition to in-person exams we also tried to introduce some other forms of assessment which, while not AI-proof, are a little harder to use it comprehensively for, such as group presentations. These have replaced essays on some modules.

But AI is a problem beyond just assessment now. A substantial number of international students for example now use live AI interpreting software in seminars, so they can follow discussions in their own language. I’ve even had some students use it in one-to-one meetings! Of course, then their English never really improves, and the problems of coursework (temptation to use AI or other forms of cheating), and exams are only exacerbated. It also hugely normalises what they think AI can be used for and it’s not surprising when that then leaches into their written work. Internationals are not the only ones using AI but the language barrier does play a role I think: AI is quite good for translation/interpreting now.

JacketPotatoFoodOfTheGods · Yesterday 09:45

How have they not done this already?

AmaryllisNightAndDay · Yesterday 10:03

JulietteHasAGun · Yesterday 09:06

Do you mean you’re not doing this already? 😆

Shhh!

We're not allowed to use AI for marking. However tempting it may be to generate a report summary and just mark that. 😂

Notanorthener · Yesterday 10:05

There is a danger here in spending money (& academic hours) policing AI use, which is just addressing the symptoms.

Instead, resources shld be focussed on the causes and devising AI proof and/or AI incorporated assessments.

Investigating and then punishing students after the event is very very stressful for all involved.

If there has been an uptick in disciplinary action as PP have stated, then this is the canary in the coal mine for universities to restructure assessments, not devote extra time and money to unproductive disciplinary processes.

JulietteHasAGun · Yesterday 10:13

Yeah we’re going down the AI incorporated assessment route. I’m not convinced of the benefit of getting non tech subject students to build a chatbot for their assessment and then write a 2000 word report on their chatbot. Partly because they can still get AI to write the report 😆

Badbadbunny · Yesterday 10:16

Notanorthener · Yesterday 10:05

There is a danger here in spending money (& academic hours) policing AI use, which is just addressing the symptoms.

Instead, resources shld be focussed on the causes and devising AI proof and/or AI incorporated assessments.

Investigating and then punishing students after the event is very very stressful for all involved.

If there has been an uptick in disciplinary action as PP have stated, then this is the canary in the coal mine for universities to restructure assessments, not devote extra time and money to unproductive disciplinary processes.

Nail on the head. If the academic staff are going to have to spend more time on searching out for AI and disciplining students, that's a complete waste of their time. They'd be better spending more time WITH the students in the first place, i.e. in tutorials, seminars, etc to actually work WITH the students, get to know them better, discuss their assignments/results in person, etc. Really no benefit in sitting in their offices (on campus or at home) looking back historically and trying to catch out cheating students when they could have spent the same time having more "one to one" time with those students. Perhaps Unis need to be more proactive and less reactive when it comes to the challenges of AI.