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Most Of The West Point Cadets Who Cheated On A Virtual Exam Will Be Allowed To Remain Enrolled

The scandal is the largest at West Point in 40 years, and it has raised questions about honor among the men and women who will become the Army's future leaders.
Leaders at the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, New York will allow most of the students involved in a major cheating scandal to remain at the prestigious school.

Late last year, 73 cadets were accused of collaborating on a virtual calculus exam. More than 50 of the accused cadets admitted they cheated - but almost all of them will get a second chance. West Point enrolled them in a special program designed to rehabilitate students who violate the honor code.

Shortly after the scandal became public last year, four cadets resigned from the academy. Another eight could face tougher discipline.

West Point superintendent Lt. Gen. Darryl Williams addressed the scandal at a March 2 congressional hearing. He defended the academy's decision to allow most of the cadets to stay.

"There's no excuse for violating the United States Military Academy honor code, and I have all the tools I need to hold them accountable for that, and we will," Williams said.

Those tools, like the rehabilitation program, were put in place in 1976, the last time a large cheating scandal rocked the academy. Back then, the accused cheaters were kicked out, and the Army established a special commission to investigate.

Craig Bruce Smith, an assistant professor of military history at the Army School of Advanced Military Studies and the author of American Honor, said the 1976 scandal led West Point to reassess what honor really means.

"Honor was understood pretty widely throughout society in the 18th and 19th century, but it's very much faded from public discourse and discussion by the 20th, 21st century," said Smith, who noted he was speaking for himself, and that his views do not represent the Department of Defense or the Army.

"So how the honor code has been administered has changed greatly," Smith said.

The academy began to allow more discretion in punishing honor code violations after the 1976 scandal.

"So rather than a black and white: 'If you have broken this, you are removed,' that there should be an ability to assess the situation and circumstances and to have a response that is not all or nothing," Smith said.

That's been the trend throughout higher education. At non-military colleges, rehabilitation approaches - like the kind at West Point - are much more common than outright dismissal for academic dishonesty.

"Expulsion flies in the face of everything we understand about the psychology of ethical and moral behavior," said David Rettinger, the former head of the International Center for Academic Integrity. He studies honor codes and teaches psychological science at the University of Mary Washington.

That's partly because the section of the brain that makes you feel "icky" when you do something wrong isn't fully developed until around age 23 to 26 - after college is over.

Rettinger said rehabilitation seems in line with West Point's mission - to instill the values of duty, honor and country.

"That doesn't necessarily mean weeding people out who are imperfect, because we're all imperfect," Rettinger said. "That means taking the best cadets we can and turning them into the best officers they can be, which means teaching them. And if there's no opportunity for redemption, what are we really teaching?"

But Congresswoman Jackie Speier, a California Democrat who chairs the Military Personnel Subcommittee, said cadets accepted into elite military academies should be held to a higher standard.

"I want to see accountability that frankly, I am very disappointed does not exist in the academies right now," Speier said.

"When you have etched in the marble at West Point, 'A cadet will not lie, cheat, steal or tolerate those who do,' that should be crystal clear," Speier said.

West Point leaders called the cheating "extremely disappointing." But speaking to the congressional committee, Superintendent Williams also noted the cadets faced an unusual situation during the pandemic.

"Our young men and women were in a remote learning environment, and some were challenged in terms of home life," Williams said. "They were away from their coaches, their teachers, and the structures that provide the way ahead."

This story was produced by the American Homefront Project, a public media collaboration that reports on American military life and veterans. Funding comes from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.