Princeton Ends 133-Year Honor Tradition: Mandatory Proctoring for In-Person Exams Approved
Princeton University has made a landmark decision that reshapes its approach to academic integrity. For the first time in 133 years, the faculty voted to require proctoring for all in-person examinations, effectively ending a longstanding tradition rooted in the university’s honor code. The change, approved after intense debate, signals a shift in how the institution balances trust with the need to deter cheating.
A Historic Shift in Academic Integrity
Since 1893, Princeton’s honor code allowed students to take exams without proctors present. The system relied on a collective commitment to honesty, with violations reported by peers. However, recent incidents of academic dishonesty—including organized cheating rings exposed during remote learning—prompted administrators to reconsider. The new policy mandates that at least one proctor monitor each exam room, though the honor code will still govern other aspects of academic conduct.

The Faculty Vote and Rationale
On May 3, 2026, the Princeton faculty voted 312–178 in favor of the proctoring requirement. The decision came after a yearlong review by the Ad Hoc Committee on Examination Integrity. Key drivers included:
- Rising cheating rates: Internal data showed a 60% increase in honor code violations between 2019 and 2025.
- Inequity concerns: Unproctored exams benefited students with access to private study spaces and technology.
- Alumni pressure: A petition signed by over 2,000 graduates argued that the honor code was no longer tenable.
“We have to adapt to a new reality where trust alone isn’t enough,” said Professor Maria Chen, chair of the committee. “Proctoring ensures fairness for all students.”
Student and Faculty Reactions
The decision has sparked mixed reactions. The Princeton Student Government released a statement calling the move “a necessary but painful evolution.” Some students worry that proctoring erodes the spirit of the honor code. “It changes the culture from one of mutual respect to one of surveillance,” said sophomore Liam Ortiz. Others support the change, noting that it levels the playing field. Meanwhile, a minority of faculty members opposed the measure, arguing that it undermines Princeton’s core values. As Professor James Harris put it, “We are teaching students that we don’t believe them.”

Implications for the Honor Code
Although proctoring is now required, the honor code remains in effect. Students must still sign a pledge on each exam, and violations outside of proctored settings—such as plagiarism or unauthorized collaboration on assignments—will continue to be adjudicated by the Honor Committee. However, the new policy redefines the code’s scope. “The honor code is not dead; it’s being updated,” said Dean of the Faculty Sarah Becker. “We are preserving the spirit of integrity while addressing practical challenges.”
Looking Ahead
The proctoring mandate takes effect for the fall 2026 semester. The university will hire additional proctors and invest in training to ensure consistency across departments. A review is scheduled for 2028 to evaluate the policy’s impact on cheating rates and student morale. For now, Princeton joins a growing list of elite universities—including Harvard and Yale—that have moved toward proctored in-person exams. The decision marks the end of an era, but administrators hope it will strengthen the institution’s academic integrity for generations to come.
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