A federal court yesterday ruled against parents who sued a Massachusetts school district for punishing their son who used an artificial intelligence tool to complete an assignment.
Dale and Jennifer Harris sued Hingham High School officials and the School Committee and sought a preliminary injunction requiring the school to change their son's grade and expunge the incident from his disciplinary record before he needs to submit college applications. The parents argued that there was no rule against using AI in the student handbook, but school officials said the student violated multiple policies.
The Harris' motion for an injunction was rejected in an order issued yesterday from US District Court for the District of Massachusetts. US Magistrate Judge Paul Levenson found that school officials "have the better of the argument on both the facts and the law."
"On the facts, there is nothing in the preliminary factual record to suggest that HHS officials were hasty in concluding that RNH [the Harris' son, referred to by his initials] had cheated," Levenson wrote. "Nor were the consequences Defendants imposed so heavy-handed as to exceed Defendants' considerable discretion in such matters."
"On the evidence currently before the Court, I detect no wrongdoing by Defendants," Levenson also wrote.
Students copied and pasted AI “hallucinations”
The incident occurred in December 2023 when RNH was a junior. The school determined that RNH and another student "had cheated on an AP US History project by attempting to pass off, as their own work, material that they had taken from a generative artificial intelligence ('AI') application," Levenson wrote. "Although students were permitted to use AI to brainstorm topics and identify sources, in this instance the students had indiscriminately copied and pasted text from the AI application, including citations to nonexistent books (i.e., AI hallucinations)." They received failing grades on two parts of the multi-part project but "were permitted to start from scratch, each working separately, to complete and submit the final project," the order said. RNH's discipline included a Saturday detention. He was also barred from selection for the National Honor Society, but he was ultimately allowed into the group after his parents filed the lawsuit. School officials "point out that RNH was repeatedly taught the fundamentals of academic integrity, including how to use and cite AI," Levenson wrote. The magistrate judge agreed that "school officials could reasonably conclude that RNH's use of AI was in violation of the school's academic integrity rules and that any student in RNH's position would have understood as much." Levenson's order described how the students used AI to generate a script for a documentary film:The evidence reflects that the pair did not simply use AI to help formulate research topics or identify sources to review. Instead, it seems they indiscriminately copied and pasted text that had been generated by Grammarly.com ("Grammarly"), a publicly available AI tool, into their draft script. Evidently, the pair did not even review the "sources" that Grammarly provided before lifting them. The very first footnote in the submission consists of a citation to a nonexistent book: "Lee, Robert. Hoop Dreams: A Century of Basketball. Los Angeles: Courtside Publications, 2018." The third footnote also appears wholly factitious: "Doe, Jane. Muslim Pioneers: The Spiritual Journey of American Icons. Chicago: Windy City Publishers, 2017." Significantly, even though the script contained citations to various sources—some of which were real—there was no citation to Grammarly, and no acknowledgement that AI of any kind had been used.