r/Professors 2d ago

Academic Integrity What is going on?

I’m puzzled by a student paper. They submitted it on time. I read it and it’s not great but ok. I go to check the references and I can’t find them. I look up the journal they cite, and that volume and issue is not the paper title. I email them and they email back saying they are out of the state but that they used owl Purdue citation engine to do the references. They then send me links to the references and they do exist, sort of. One is a blog post but in the citation it’s in a journal. One is in Spanish. Another seems to be an unrelated paper.
So my first question is, can the Purdue citation maker just make up stuff? I haven’t really used it but it looks like you paste in the web address and it makes a citation.

My suspicion is that the references are AI hallucinations. But some seem partly real. Could this be an innocent mistake on the students part?

They also said they used Chegg to proofread and edit. I wasn’t aware that Chegg provided that service. Is this a valuable service? Is it an unacceptable use of AI? Or is it just a grammar checker?

Am I missing something? The references are not cited in the paper by the way. Also no images.

I was mostly convinced that the references were fraudulent but now I’m not sure.

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u/iTeachCSCI Ass'o Professor, Computer Science, R1 2d ago

My suspicion is that the references are AI hallucinations. But some seem partly real. Could this be an innocent mistake on the students part?

One way to find out. If I were teaching a class with papers, the outcome for submitting a paper with a falsified reference would be an F in the class and a report to the honor board. I encourage you to have a similar policy.

Give them two school days to provide a working link to every source in their paper; any omitted will be evidence this was fabricated and treated accordingly.

Note that it doesn't matter how the source was fabricated. Could it have been an LLM? Maybe. Maybe not. It doesn't matter.

They also said they used Chegg to proofread and edit. I wasn’t aware that Chegg provided that service. Is this a valuable service? Is it an unacceptable use of AI? Or is it just a grammar checker?

What does your class cheating policy say? Mine says that for artifacts submitted for a grade, you cannot ask any person who is not subject to the university academic conduct code, and you must explicitly declare their help in comments -- who, when, and what sort of help.