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To protect students from the coronavirus, the National University of Singapore (NUS) allowed them to take a practical examination at home.
But despite being warned not to cheat, a significant number allegedly shared their answers and plagiarised each other.
NUS is now scrutinising their submissions and identifying the alleged cheaters so action can be taken against them.
Replying to queries from The New Paper, a spokesman for the NUS School of Computing confirmed it is investigating, with instructors still making plagiarism checks and have yet to finalise the results.
“NUS takes a serious view of academic dishonesty and does not condone plagiarism,” she said.
TNP understands Mr Prabawa Adi Yoga Sidi, the lecturer teaching the module, sent out an e-mail about a week ago urging students who had cheated to confess.
It is believed that several have come forward and admitted to plagiarism.
The exam is worth 15 per cent of the final grade for the programming methodology module, which is compulsory for engineering students.
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