http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,22049,22018723-5007132,00.html
By Luke McIlveen
July 05, 2007 12:00am
THE prestigious University of Technology Sydney has been rocked by the theft of completed exam papers from the office of a senior lecturer.
The Daily Telegraph can reveal four papers were stolen and others possibly tampered with during the 15th-floor break-in at the Department of Mathematical Sciences last Tuesday night.
Senior lecturer and respected mathematician Layna Groen said yesterday her door was forced open and the completed papers stolen before the final scores of 90 students could be tallied.
"Mine was the only office broken into," Dr Groen told
The Daily Telegraph yesterday.
"There have been break-ins before but usually it is more than one office and they are looking for computer equipment. It is suspicious that papers were taken.
"The four students concerned were not friends, I have checked that – they were unrelated.
"It was possibly a student who was unhappy with their results has taken them. It's also possible they broke in to change the results, to tamper with them."
She said police were called and her office dusted for fingerprints after a colleague noticed her badly damaged office door about 11pm last Tuesday. No arrests have been made or charges laid.
The final exam on operations research modelling was completed by first-year UTS Bachelor of Science students on June 19.
The paper asked students to complete six detailed mathematical problems over three hours.
The theft left academics with no choice but to force the four students whose papers disappeared to sit a different exam.
The prospect of re-sitting the exams has left students furious, including some from overseas who are now questioning the university's credibility.
One foreign student sent a chain email accusing the thief of ruining his stay in Australia.
"If you are one of the three and you don't reply back to me then don't be surprised if I'll conduct further private investigation on you (I will get the names anyway in some way)," he wrote.
"Whoever it has been, if it has been a student, man you have been really ridiculous, and be sure it does not finish here."
Dr Groen said her office had been broken into before, but never for exam papers.
"It's bizarre, I had the papers sitting on my desk and had not finished marking them," she said.
"They were the only thing of value – I don't keep a laptop in my office or anything like that."
"I had marked the papers but I had not yet tallied up the marks."
"I can't speculate. It's the first time anything like this has happened. It's certainly not something we would want to advertise."
Despite being shocked by the theft, Dr Groen said she did not believe any of her students were capable of stealing back their exams to achieve a better result.