【AI前沿】AI invades Princeton, where 30% of students cheat—but peers won't snitch
cheaters never prosper?AI invades Princeton, where 30% of students cheat—but peers won’t snitchOld “honor code” systems are under strain.Nate Anderson–May 13, 2026 3:47 pm|115Students at Princeton.Credit:
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settingsStory textSizeSmallStandardLargeWidth*StandardWideLinksStandardOrange* Subscribers onlyLearn moreMinimize to navPity poor Princeton.The ultra-elite university has amere $38 billionin endowment money. Many of its dormslack air conditioning. And it’s in New Jersey.I kid about New Jersey, of course. Despitenot being allowed to pump one’s own gasthere, the “Garden State” grew on me during three years spent in the Princeton area. I still keep up with its goings-on, which led me tothis week’s article in the Daily Princetonianon how AI was disrupting the university’s long-running traditions.Although a beautiful place, Princeton is also extremely competitive; before one heads up to New York to become a captain of finance, one needs to succeed in the classroom. And when everyone else in the classroom is a genius, cheating becomes a real option to stay ahead, especially in the sciences.In a2025 survey of Princeton seniors, 29.9 percent of students admitted to cheating on at least one assignment or exam. (This skews differently by degree. Students seeking a bachelor of science in engineering [BSE] degree admitted to cheating 40.8 percent of the time, compared to “only” 26.4 percent of bachelor of arts [BA] students.)And according to the data, most of this cheating is done with generative AI.Cheating is easier at Princeton than at some places because the school does not allow its professors to proctor exams. Thanks to an honor code pact going back to 1893, Princeton profs do not watch their students take in-class tests. Students, for their part, must write, “I pledge my honor that I have not violated the Honor Code during this examination” at the start of each test. Students are also honor-bound to report other students that they see cheating.But thanks to cell phones, AI, and a culture not willing to “snitch” on others, the old system is under significant strain. Cheating is now widespread and is not being reported—even though it bothers many students. As aJanuary opinion piece about the school’s honor codeput it:According to students I’ve spoken with, cheating on in-person exams comes as no surprise in some engineering and economics classes. One student told me that in one Economics exam, there was a line out the door to use the men’s bathroom—suggesting that cheating was ubiquitous.But because students don’t want to report this behavior, many “turn a blind eye to cheating, or deliberately avoid sitting near the back row of a lecture hall to avoid catching their peers in the act,” the piece added. The 2025 senior survey found that 44.6 percent of all seniors had witnessed cheating—and chosen not to report it.These dynamics have led both students and faculty to ask Princeton to bring professors back as exam proctors. According to adocument circulated by the school, there is now a “perception that cheating on in-class exams has become widespread.”Why? According to administrators:Commonly cited [reasons] are the advent of generative artificial intelligence products which significantly lower the barrier to gaining unfair advantage in the context of an in-class examination. The ease of access of these tools on a small personal device have also changed the external appearance of misconduct during an examination, which is much harder for other students to observe (and hence to report). Many reports that do arrive to the Honor Committee are now anonymous because of another technological development of longer standing—social media—which has reportedly deterred students from reporting openly out of apprehension of doxxing or shaming among their peer groups. This has made it difficult for the Honor Committee and the Office of the Dean of Undergraduate Students (ODUS) to follow up on concerns, even when there is significant buzz or outrage about supposedly egregious violations.This week,Princeton faculty votedto require instructor proctoring of all in-class exams beginning on July 1. Only a single faculty member objected.Even after July 1, however, professors will not interfere directly with attempts to cheat. Instead, they will observe and take notes, serving as “an additional witness in the room” who can testify in cases later brought before the Honor Court.AI has quickly upended education, pushing many teachers to back off on written assignments and take-home tests in favor of in-class or even oral exams. As Princeton’s example shows, though, not even this is enough; plenty of students, given the chance, will just as happily use AI to cheat while in a classroom surrounded by their peers if they can get away with it.Such widespread outsourcing of thought and memory is deeply depressing to many educators. This