TLDR:
- High school senior and family sue Hingham High School officials over AI use punishment
- Student used AI for research on history project, received D grade and detention
- Punishment impacted student’s GPA, National Honor Society eligibility, and college prospects
- Parents claim school lacked clear AI policy at the time of the incident
- Lawsuit seeks grade restoration, record expungement, and AI training for school officials
The family of a Hingham High School senior has filed a federal lawsuit against school officials, alleging their son was unfairly punished for using artificial intelligence (AI) in a history research project.
According to the lawsuit, the student and a classmate used AI to prepare the initial outline and research for a project on NBA Hall of Famer Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s civil rights activism. The assignment was part of the “National History Day” contest.
The students claim that their teacher, Susan Petrie, did not prohibit AI use for research when the project was assigned, and the school handbook at the time contained no references to AI or its classification as cheating.
The situation escalated when Petrie accused the students of cheating by using AI. As a result, they were instructed to complete new projects separately without AI assistance.
The student in question received a D grade on the project, which negatively impacted his grade point average. Additionally, both students were required to attend a Saturday detention session.
The lawsuit states that the student, referred to as R.N.H., had maintained an exemplary GPA exceeding 4.0 and received a perfect ACT score. The family argues that the punishment has harmed his college prospects, particularly as he competes for admission to elite universities.
The school’s decision to bar the student from joining the National Honor Society has further complicated his academic standing. According to the lawsuit, the National Honor Society faculty adviser, Karen Shaw, described the AI use as the “most egregious” violation of academic honesty seen in 16 years.
The student’s parents, Jennifer and Dale Harris, met with school officials to voice their concerns about the punishment. They argue that using AI for research is not considered plagiarism and that there is ongoing debate about its appropriate use in academic settings.
The lawsuit contends that the students “did not take someone else’s work or ideas and pass them off as their own” but instead used AI to generate and synthesize new information.
In August, Hingham High School amended its student handbook to include a prohibition on AI use. However, the Harris family argues that this change came too late and that the lack of clear guidelines at the time of the incident led to unfair treatment of their son.
The lawsuit seeks several forms of relief, including restoring the student’s Social Studies grade to a B, expunging any disciplinary record, retroactively inducting him into the National Honor Society, and requiring school officials to undergo training in AI use in the classroom.