AI cheating surge hits SA universities as UNISA warns of student integrity crisis
Kabous Le Roux
19 February 2026 | 8:54AI misuse is rising at South African universities, with Unisa warning of plagiarism spikes and disciplinary backlogs, raising fears among parents and educators about exams and real learning.
- CapeTalk
- Good Morning Cape Town with Lester Kiewit
- Lester Kiewit
- Artificial Intelligence (AI)
- University of South Africa (Unisa)
- Tertiary education

Concerns are mounting across South Africa’s higher education sector as universities struggle to contain the rapid spread of artificial intelligence (AI) tools among students.
The University of South Africa (UNISA) has reported a marked increase in AI-assisted submissions, contributing to rising plagiarism levels and a growing backlog of disciplinary cases.
The development is intensifying anxiety among educators and parents who fear the technology could undermine academic credibility and the value of university qualifications.
AI use blurs the line between help and cheating
AI engineer Akhil Boddu says the shift is profound because AI is now embedded in everyday student workflows.
While many students use AI tools for research support or structuring ideas, problems arise when entire essays or answers are generated and submitted as original work.
Detection systems can flag AI-generated content, but they are not fully reliable, which is creating disputes between students and institutions and adding pressure on already stretched disciplinary processes.
Universities may need to rethink assessments
Experts warn that the traditional model of written assignments may no longer prove whether students genuinely understand their coursework.
Boddu says universities may need to move toward new methods of assessment that focus on demonstrating understanding rather than simply producing written work.
Possible changes include:
--Oral discussions or interviews after assignments
--Requiring students to declare how AI tools were used
--More emphasis on reasoning, explanation and applied knowledge
Some universities internationally have already begun shifting toward these models, and South African institutions may soon have to follow.
Reading habits are changing among students
There are also concerns about how AI is reshaping the way students engage with study material.
Tools that summarise textbooks, research papers and lecture notes are making it easier to process large volumes of information quickly.
But educators worry that students may be reading less deeply, relying on summaries instead of engaging with full texts.
For parents, the fear is that faster learning may not always mean better understanding.
AI bans unlikely as universities adapt
While banning AI tools might appear to be a straightforward response, experts say it is unlikely to work given how widespread the technology has become.
Instead, universities may have little choice but to adapt how they teach and assess students in the AI era.
For South Africa’s education sector, the challenge is no longer whether AI will change learning, but how quickly institutions can respond before academic standards are affected.
For more information, listen to Boddu using the audio player below:
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