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AI Disrupts Classrooms: Students Cheat with Google Lens
11 Nov
Summary
- Lowest-performing students turn in flawless essays using Google Lens
- AI-assisted cheating becomes a growing concern in classrooms across America
- Teachers spend hours tracing version histories and running plagiarism scans

On November 11, 2025, a routine grading session for Los Angeles high school English teacher Dustin Stevenson took an unexpected turn. His lowest-performing students had all submitted flawless A-grade essays, raising immediate suspicions. Stevenson's fears were soon confirmed when one of his students revealed the secret: Google Lens, a tool embedded in their school-issued Chromebooks.
The discovery marks a turning point in what educators across the country describe as an escalating battle against invisible academic dishonesty. What began as a tool to identify plants or translate signs has now become an academic disruptor, allowing students to bypass the learning process altogether. Teachers, once accustomed to catching students glancing at phones or whispering answers, now face a new challenge: a tool that operates in plain sight, under the guise of legitimate technology.
The problem extends beyond Lens, as AI models like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Copilot have already infiltrated the education system. However, Lens's integration into Google's ecosystem makes it especially difficult to police. In response to Stevenson's report, the tool quietly disappeared from his students' Chromebooks, but the underlying issue remains. Educators and school leaders now grapple with the haphazard introduction of AI and its impact on students' ability to think, write, and research independently.




