When I started teaching, I put all of my old tests on my website just because of this. It never seemed fair that only certain people had access to all of the old tests. When I taught my first non-majors science class, I was in for a shock on the first exam. I printed up 3 extra copies of the exam, but when I passed them out, 12 people were without an exam! I asked people to check and make sure they didn't have extra copies. No one would volunteer any. I didn't let anyone start, had 12 extra copies run off, passed them out...and 6 people still didn't have exams! At this point, I was pretty mad.
Wow, that's pretty blatant, and I would agree that those students were involved in cheating.
I still don't agree that test banks are always cases of cheating. If it's clear that the professor reuses questions and makes any transparent attempt to signal the students are not permitted keep the questions, then yes, it's dishonest. But if a prof doesn't overtly signal this (for example, by retaining graded exams rather than letting students keep them) then test banks in and of themselves aren't cause for accusations of academic dishonesty.
That statement has already been proven false on this thread. And the fact that the student government is attempting to create a similar test bank suggests that the Greek system doesn't in fact create an unfair advantage for its members. Any student, given a large and disciplined enough network, could have created a test bank.
This sounds like it acknowledges that idea that test banks (like those in the Greek system) do give an unfair advantage and creating an open one will allow everyone the same advantage.
Alan
I dunno. I do see that logic, but I guess I quibble with the word "unfair." An analogy might be that some students can afford to get a tutor and others can't. There is differential access that isn't based on merit, but would we really say students can't use their resources - be they financial or their social networks - to be more successful in their studies? It's an equity issue for sure, but I think a different sense of unfairness comes in to play there.