A CULTURE OF ETHICS is NEEDED to ADDRESS the AI CHALLENGE


Posted May 20, 2025 by BullionPR123

South African tertiary education providers are taking heavy fire as students use generative artificial intelligence (AI) platforms to allegedly cheat their way through their degrees.

 
MEDIA RELEASE (FINAL)



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE       

Johannesburg, May 21, 2025



South African tertiary education providers are taking heavy fire as students use generative artificial intelligence (AI) platforms to allegedly cheat their way through their degrees. By all accounts, those in positions of authority within these institutions are at a loss, as there is no clear strategy to address the situation definitively.



The South African tertiary education sector has consistently produced some of the most sought-after candidates in the world. South Africans take pride in their hard work and tenacity, placing them among the world's top students. However, an article by the Daily Maverick recently uncovered that tertiary institutions face increased levels of cheating as students take advantage of the unchecked growth of technology. MANCOSA points out that, while technology is becoming a significant issue within key institutions, academic leaders need to know their enemy and encourage students to use technology responsibly.



Little recourse

Duncan Park, MANCOSA Registrar, sympathises with tertiary education providers, pointing out they are in a challenging position with extraordinarily little recourse. They will face an uphill battle if they continue approaching the generative AI challenge with the same strategy. "As an exercise, I used Turnitin, an online tool used by most tertiary education providers to detect the use of generative AI in a piece of work. Turnitin determined that there was a 70% probability that a paragraph I wrote myself was generated by an AI tool. I then ran a different paragraph that AI generated through Turnitin, and it said that the writing was original. The inherent flaws in online systems to accurately predict what has been generated by AI and what has not mean that academic leaders cannot give students a zero for assignments that they suspect have been produced with the assistance of generative AI tools," says Park.



With technology expanding rather than abating, Park points out that tertiary institutions must invest significant time and resources to teach students how to use generative AI ethically and develop a culture of responsibility within their student body.



Changing tack

Reflecting on the current situation, Park acknowledges that distance-based institutions are more prone to the cheating problem than other institutions. The Daily Maverick article points out that tertiary education providers that interact with students in person have resorted to moving back towards requiring students to hand in handwritten assignments and take oral tests and exams. Further, institutions that were using tutorial classes as a block to do research for assignments are now using these classes as periods where students have to write out portions of their assignments and then hand them in to continue in the next tutorial class.



"This becomes difficult in a distance learning environment where we don't have direct access to our students and there is no guarantee that students will be attending classes during conventional hours, as they often have to balance work and family commitments," says Park who adds that MANCOSA is a technology focused institution that excited about the future growth of technology and the impact that it will have on society. "We need to start embracing technology and the positive impact that it can have on society rather than be wary of it," concludes Park.



Razack Uddin, Director: Teaching & Learning at MANOCSA, points out that MANCOSA has adopted a forward-thinking approach to prepare our academic community for an AI-enhanced future. "Our Institutional AI Framework, together with AI Guidelines to staff and students, provides clear guidance on the ethical use of AI across all institutional functions. For our faculty, we offer comprehensive professional development programmes that build AI literacy and innovative teaching strategies while maintaining rigorous academic standards. Students benefit from a dual-focused curriculum that develops technical AI skills and essential human capabilities such as critical thinking and ethical reasoning. Our continuous learning model ensures all members of our community remain at the forefront of educational innovation in this rapidly evolving digital landscape," says Uddin.



Integrating AI to enhance learning

Many tertiary institutions are trying to address the AI challenge from a position of strength that has served them well in the past. However, the technology is an unconventional enemy in this instance and calls for adopting a different approach.



Both Park and Uddin have pointed out that the use of AI needs to increase so that students see it as a learning tool as opposed to a tool that can be used disingenuously.



MANCOSA recognises generative AI as a transformative educational tool rather than a threat to traditional learning. "We are systematically incorporating AI across our programmes to enhance the learning experience while preserving academic integrity. Students learn to use AI as a collaborative partner for research and content creation while developing crucial skills in source evaluation and proper attribution. Our redesigned assessments focus on measuring higher-order cognitive abilities that AI cannot replicate, for now, ensuring graduates possess both technical proficiency and the human judgment needed in modern workplaces," says Uddin.



He adds that generative AI enables MANCOSA to deliver unprecedented customisation in education. We are implementing AI-enabled interactive video lessons, scenario-based learning modules and gamified experiences to cater to diverse learning preferences. These innovations particularly benefit MANCOSAs, working professional students who require flexible, self-paced study options.



Challenging times ahead

Looking ahead, Park and Uddin acknowledge that, while a different approach is needed, it will not be easy for institutions to change their mindset.



"MANCOSA approaches AI integration with robust safeguards across three key areas. We have redesigned assessments to focus on skills beyond AI's capabilities, including critical analysis and practical application. Our staff receive specialised training to identify and address potential biases in AI outputs while strictly implementing tools with proven fairness protocols. Data protection remains paramount, with stringent measures ensuring full compliance with regulatory requirements. This balanced framework allows MANCOSA to harness AI's benefits while upholding our commitment to academic excellence and ethical practice. The amount of work and time to implement this effectively will differ depending on the size of the institution. This may be a multi-year project," says Uddin.



Ethics has always been challenging for many tertiary institutions to implement, especially when there is no definitive way to prove that a student is acting unethically. Developing a culture of good faith and encouraging students to abide by it will work in the long term, but this will take time and patience that many institutions are short on.



Ends



___________________________________________________________________________



ISSUED FOR AND ON BEHALF OF MANCOSA

JONATHAN FAURIE

OF BULLION PR & COMMUNICATION

EMAIL: [email protected]

CELL: 079 566 8814
-- END ---
Share Facebook Twitter
Print Friendly and PDF DisclaimerReport Abuse
Contact Email [email protected]
Issued By Bullion PR & Communication
Phone 0832715336
Business Address Unit 299 Greenstone Crest, Block 38, 99 Stoneridge Drive
Country South Africa
Categories Technology
Tags mancosa , bullionpr , education , technology , ai , university
Last Updated May 20, 2025