Some wore do-it-yourself hats constructed from egg packing containers, others created headgear from cardboard and coat hangers and a few wore Halloween masks as they sat their exams.
Their function? To forestall dishonest.
Professor Mary Pleasure Mandane-Ortiz, an engineering teacher on the Bicol College Faculty of Engineering in Legazpi Metropolis within the Philippines, stumbled throughout the thought whereas shopping Fb, she advised NBC Information on Tuesday.
So two days earlier than a number of engineering and computing exams on Oct. 17 and 18, she instructed her college students to create “anti-cheating hats.”
“They accepted the problem with none complaints,” she mentioned, including that she was delighted with the creativity they’d proven whereas making them, earlier than they sat their first exams in a classroom after greater than two years of on-line exams due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

“I used to be fairly nervous at first,” mentioned pupil Marc Louise Pelaez, 21, who wore a home made hat through the examination. “Seeing the hats made by my classmates was hilarious. The temper contained in the classroom modified from intense to thrilling,” he added.
The hats made the exams much less demanding and extra pleasing, he mentioned. “I actually loved the exercise and I’m wanting ahead to our ultimate examination in December,” he mentioned.
Calling the thought “very efficient,” Mandane-Ortiz mentioned a few of her college students completed their exams early and nobody had been caught dishonest this 12 months.

She added that she had been impressed after studying a couple of related concept that was applied in 2013 by a college in Thailand’s capital, Bangkok.
After her college students shared photographs of their hats on social media, some gained hundreds of likes in a brief area of time and the story was picked up by native media, because it had been in Thailand.
“I imagine the scholars will always remember this. Sooner or later, I’m planning to strive it once more,” Mandane-Ortiz mentioned.