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by eastbound 1475 days ago
In the best case, you get nothing. Most probably half of the students turn against you. And possibly the teacher himself takes revenge on you for snitching. Some teachers are of the opinion that “snitches get stitches”, often as a way to cope with their own lack of teaching, and sometimes they see it as a good life lesson for the student.
3 comments

So report the teacher. The whole snitches get stitches thing needs to stop. We aren’t in a goddamned prison yard. And if someone actually threatens you, call the police. Raise hell about it. Gangster, prison yard culture needs to die. Cheating is never ok. Cheaters should be thrown out of school with zero second chances. People in the US are often going into debt for tens and even hundreds of thousands of dollars for college — when people cheat, that diminishes the value of that extraordinary expense. Not to mention honor and integrity ought to matter.
When I was in high school, a bunch of AP students cheated off the valedictorian our senior year...when it was exposed, they hushed everything up rather than allowing a scandal that would ruin the school's and the students' reputations (some of which were bound for Ivy League schools in a few months' time).

Sometimes, the entire community will protect its cheaters.

As Electrical engineering TAs in the late 80's, we knew who was copying class homework assignments from their classmates based on transcription errors in the handwritten work that was turned in. Since the class professor couldn't care less about the cheating, we would consistently score the source assignments a few points less than the ones that had copied the assignment. We kept this up for the entire semester.
You graded the original worse than the copies? So the copiers were rewarded?
they did lend their original out to be copied... thus facilitating dishonesty.
Sure; dock me a mark or two and tell me why. But why not just give a straight zero to the others that didn't actually do the work?
It's unjust, though, to punish those who facilitated an offence more than those who committed it.
Sharing your work to others to copy isn’t facilitating, it’s committing. Cheating is cheating.
You must have thought it would discourage hardworking students from allowing other students to copy them. Did it work?
Companies will sue you if you report security vulnerabilities. So yeah definitely a good life lesson.

This world is messed up.

And “no situation can be improved by involving police.”

And the fact that Justice never correctly delivers justice in any country of the world, but adds 2 to 10 years and large expenses in the process.