<p>You people are all so mild about this.</p>
<p>99% - 99.99% of the kids discuss the multiple choice/frq. The INSTANT I finished my essays, I turned around and asked everyone around me how it was and they, some of them very erm… “good, moral” kids willingly and openly responded and discussed them with me. OUR TEACHER even asked us to tell her the questions. COME ON NOW.</p>
<p>Besides I highly, highly doubt you’ve never, in your entire life cheated.</p>
<p>Just because everybody else does it and just because somebody may have cheated in the past doesn’t make it okay to cheat and break rules at every opportunity. That may be your life philosophy, but to the rest of the world, two wrongs don’t make a right.</p>
<p>SeekingUni, go preach else where, because no one cares.</p>
<p>LOL ok buddy. Preaching? I love how the dissenting opinion always puts words in others’ mouths. It must be some sort of defense mechanism.</p>
<p>And evidently, you care enough to involve yourself in the discussion.</p>
<p>gobipie, I do not think discussing the test after it is over considered “cheating.” You’re just breaking a rule, haha.</p>
<p>Edit: SeekingUni, I don’t see anyone discussing with you so get a life… Maybe some friends too… LOL</p>
<p>OP- You only have the moral grounds to do this if you have not discussed the MC with ANYBODY, not one question. I seriously doubt this and you are probably looking for some excuse to get back at somebody which is just wrong.</p>
<p>It all depends on how much you hate this person. You know what will happen if you do that, so the choice is yours.</p>
<p>Get some friends? Says the guy posting on a forum about AP tests discussing the morality of cheating.</p>
<p>Although I feel that cheating/discussion (ETS is so backwards) is by no means an excusable action, the simple fact is that because of their shotgun method in investigating and condemning any violation of code (wiping the whole class’ score and making them retest in a hellish August week), it does so much more harm than good to report. Reporting may definitely be the honorable thing to do, but the repercussions of it are so intense that the risks outweigh the benefits. </p>
<p>Furthermore, I am pretty sure there are better ways of getting back at a rival than canceling his/her AP scores…</p>
<p>Reporting people for sharing answers during a test is one thing (there’s a 10-page-long thread in this forum somewhere); reporting people for discussing MC and FR is another. Doing the first is debatable as to whether it’s moral/right or wrong; doing the second just makes you a ******. Doing that could very well lead to what people have mentioned–the guy does get his scores canceled, but everyone has to take make-ups or will get his/her scores canceled. There are better ways of being mean to someone you don’t like.</p>