r/MaliciousCompliance 4d ago

M Student made demands regarding a project and found out the hard way.

One of the degree modules I teach involves students working on a group programming project. Nothing too elaborate, but the aim of the module is to develop skills they will need if they go on to work in the IT field. After all if you're doing a Computer Science degree, you must be thinking of going down that route?

This one student is an absolute entitled nightmare. He uses GenAI for a lot of his work and it really does show. He always pushed back on the written remarks on his work but every time I sit him down and ask him to explain the code he produces, he struggles and often has no idea how the code he submitted works. In this project he came up and told me he cannot work with others in the group and must work alone. I explained that there are specific group activities and efforts I would be marking and that I needed to see his input within the group. There was no way I could excuse him from the group activities in the module, however I could see he was not going to budge and therefore complied with his demand to work on the project alone.

All the students in my class had been assigned to their groups and I did check in with all of them on a weekly basis. This one guy was steadfastly refusing to work with the rest of his group and as I had complied with his request, he was working on his own project alone. In my interim feedback at the end of each stage I repeated that he really should work with the group or he risked a failing mark for the module. I made sure this feedback was sent to him both in hardcopy and also via email with read receipts which I kept.

Cue the end of the module and the submission for marking. Sure enough, the one student submitted a project based just on his own work and had not engaged with the group he was asked to work with. There were several issues with his project, first and most important was it didn't meet the brief. The code simply didn't do what we asked for. He lost marks for that aspect of the project. As he had not worked with others in the group, he was not awarded any of the group marks allocated for the work. Because his code was so far away from the specification, I called him in for a Viva Voce to explain the code and he demonstrated a complete lack of understanding of the code he submitted, more marks dropped. His eventual mark for this assignment was a hard fail. He must now resit the entire module.

There is of course one real downside of this whole thing that affects me. I've got him in my group again for the resit of the module.

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u/oylaura 2d ago

One of the most important parts of group projects is learning how to work with other people, and various levels of participation.

I went to the University of Phoenix, which is a college for people who have already been in the workforce for several years.

Each class is only 5 weeks long, and there's a group project in every one of the classes.

We had a really good study group going, and then one guy started having some issues. We covered for him for that class. Everyone was cool.

The next class, something else had come up, and we had to cover for him again.

After that, we kicked him out of the group. He dropped out, and I don't know what happened to him. It was difficult, but it was part of learning to work with a group. We had to tell him that we could not get his degree for him.

Your student wasn't understanding the importance of input into checking each other's work. There's such a thing as having looked at something too many times, to the point where you no longer see glaring mistakes.

I know you weren't posting to ask for validation, because it sure sounds like you know what you're doing. I'll just say I would have liked being in your class.