<p>Hi
my teacher caught me cheating and i want to know how to argue against what she and i've got no one to talk to in real life so i just look around.</p>
<p>she said that 14 correct MC question were identical to the student who she think i copied off. However, many students got these correct so she said that 5 incorrect MC question were similar. </p>
<p>she also put statistic out of 168 students in class saying that</p>
<p>Q1 is 52.3% shared by students in class
Q2 25.6%
Q3 1.8%
Q4 20.8%
Q5 6.5 %</p>
<p>I dont know how to argue my way out if this. I'm really sorry for making her think I cheat but honestly I just guessed on most of them. What should I do when I meet with her and the panel. (she came unprepared for the first meeting so we have to meet the panel.) Now i could face expulsion. Please help me.</p>
<p>Start understanding statistics lol jk jk</p>
<p>Well her statistics aren’t enough to conclude this. Seriously, if she wants to fight using numbers, then so can you. Ask her to calculate the percentages for the other incorrect questions. 5 incorrect MC (depending on how many questions total on the exam) are not enough questions to come to this conclusion, especially when each have significant varying levels of overlap. How many questions total on the exam? IF worst comes to worst, and you HONESTLY didn’t cheat and she still doesn’t believe you, then I would just sincerely talk to her in person and tell her the truth.</p>
<p>You will win this one, op. If you didn’t cheat, then you won’t be punished.</p>
<p>Something seems off here, looking at his/her other posts. </p>
<p>OP, you admitted you cheated in the past. Then you say you’ve been caught again. But you’re trying to prove your innocence? It seems like you did it and are now trying to get out of it.</p>
<p>there 34 question. Op here I’ve tried to post but no one response I just make this a shorter one.</p>