Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA), the world’s largest accounting body, has announced a significant shift in its examination policy, moving away from online assessments and requiring students to primarily sit exams in person from March onwards. This decision, reported by The Guardian, ends a practice introduced during the Covid-19 pandemic that allowed candidates to take exams remotely. Remote examinations will now only be permitted in exceptional and limited cases, as ACCA aims to protect the integrity and credibility of professional certifications in an era of rapidly advancing artificial intelligence.
According to ACCA chief executive Helen Brand, the organisation has faced growing challenges in maintaining exam integrity, with cheating methods becoming increasingly sophisticated and difficult to detect through existing monitoring systems. Online testing, originally adopted to ensure continuity during lockdowns, allowed students to progress toward certification when physical exam centres were inaccessible. However, over the past few years, regulatory bodies and professional organisations have highlighted rising instances of misconduct in high-stakes professional exams, with AI tools providing new avenues for dishonest behaviour.
Reports from previous years illustrate the extent of these concerns. In 2022, the Financial Reporting Council, the UK’s audit and accounting watchdog, identified cheating as a pressing issue across major firms, including the Big Four auditors. The same year saw Ernst & Young fined $100 million by US regulators after employees were found to have breached ethics exam rules, further demonstrating the risks associated with remote testing in professional settings. ACCA, which has nearly 260,000 members worldwide, noted that despite significant investments in preventing dishonest behaviour, individuals intent on cheating are adapting quickly, often leveraging emerging AI technologies.
Other professional accounting bodies have echoed ACCA’s concerns, with the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales reporting a rise in cheating incidents while continuing to allow certain exams online. Brand emphasised that the trend across professional qualifications indicates a reduction in reliance on remote invigilation, reflecting broader concerns about trust, credibility, and the long-term value of qualifications. The ACCA’s decision highlights the tension between accessibility and security in the digital age, demonstrating how technological advancements, while beneficial for learning and assessment delivery, have introduced new complexities in ensuring fairness and accountability in professional examinations.
By transitioning back to in-person assessments, ACCA aims to restore confidence in the certification process and mitigate the risks posed by AI-assisted misconduct, setting a precedent for other professional bodies grappling with similar challenges in maintaining rigorous standards and safeguarding the credibility of online education and examination systems.
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