Posted on 04/18/2009 9:07:07 PM PDT by Shethink13
A 10-year-old Westmoreland County boy "playing school" cracked the tight security surrounding Pennsylvania's standardized assessment tests by obtaining the codes to place an online order for a box of the closely guarded exams.
State Education Department officials were shocked by the events involving the student, a fifth-grader at Bovard Elementary School in the Hempfield Area School District.
(Excerpt) Read more at pittsburghlive.com ...
And then again... there are those who actually believe in the fable that the government best knows how to solve our problems...
This kid a future leet haxor?
The kid should get an automatic pass. He’s obviously smarter than the professional educators.
Hempfield...would that be near Pottstown?;)
Apparently not.
Apparently not...
If this resulted in a PC distribution of test scores, these administrators would fight tooth and nail to prevent disclosure.
Not to worry, our medical records are secure...
we're FN' DOOMED!!
just remember back to college... who majored in "education", "poly sci." and "journalism".... ????
One of my kids came to me to help with her statistics homework cause the teacher couldn't do the problems or explain how my daughter got the wrong answer on a test. Even with the text book. Apparently the "teachers" manual was misplaced so she just gave out the problems and checked the answer sheet.
I tell my kids to do all the problems in the text, correct the wrong answers on all the tests and show me their work.
It's not nice to "damn by faint praise" - particularly a little 10 year old kid!!
I’ll make a guess that the password was a four-digit number...nothing more. I know of numerous individuals who play this light-password game and just don’t get the implications. There is a reason why it should be eight numbers and digits.
All he did was order extra tests which were sent to the school district warehouse. They caught him when they noticed them, and viewed the order form.
It’s an embarrassment, but the kid did not breach the security surrounding the test contents.
He breached mailing access security, and was within one more step of being able to redirect a mailing to another location, which would have enabled breaching test contents. In fact, he may have been able to redirect a mailing, and simply chose not to, because the primary breach was his only hacking goal. All in all, it was more than a mere embarrassment, I think. More like a bitch slap, considering his age.
On what basis do you make this statement? It seems to go beyond the information provided in the article.
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