UK: Cheating Teachers and Dirty Tricks to Boost Exam Results on the Rise

Daily Stormer
June 15, 2014

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This is what British classrooms are going to end up looking like if something isnt done about it soon.

It is happening just as it was predicted it would. Bringing Third World peoples into a country will not change their behavior for the better, all it can ever do is drag down the standards of the First World country.

Corruption is rife in the Non-White countries and by importing them into our countries, we have now increased the corruption in ours, as it starts to become seen as just another unavoidable part of life. It has now even reached our schools, as teachers start cheating in order to gain higher exam results for their pupils “because everyone else is doing it.”

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Whats to stop you cheating when even the head of the Council does it?

From the Daily Mail:

Teachers have lost their ‘morality’ and are cheating in exams and coursework to boost pupils’ grades, an expert has claimed.

Professor Robert Coe said teachers were falling into ‘bad behaviour’ because they believed other schools were bending the rules.

It coincided with revelations that whistleblowers reported teachers for telling students what to write and completing coursework for them.

There are even claims of staff employing external consultants to finish projects.

In a separate move, exams watchdog Ofqual this week opened an unprecedented anonymous online survey that urges teachers to report experiences of improper tactics or cheating.

The questions detail some 30 strategies thought to be used to boost results.

Professor Coe, an expert in exams at Durham University and an Ofqual adviser, said: ‘I think there is a big issue about morality here, professional morality and how we have lost sight of the bigger picture.

It is kind of [seen as] OK to do things you know are wrong because everyone else is doing them: “Because I need to for the sake of my school surviving Ofsted.”

‘Bad behaviour drives out the good – if other people are doing it, it is much harder to resist,’ he told the Westminster Education Forum in London.

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That is exactly how it is in Liberia. If you don’t bribe the school, you will not be getting into the university.