While "spisat GDZ" is often seen as a sign of student laziness, it also highlights a gap in the education system where students feel overwhelmed by the volume of work. The most "interesting" shift is seeing educators move away from "answering" and toward "explaining the process" to make copying obsolete. AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more
Educational technology has evolved to counter simple copying:
Modern teachers use software to see if a student's solution matches the exact phrasing of popular GDZ sites.
In the past, students passed around notebooks. Today, "Spisat GDZ" (copying ready-made homework) is a massive industry. Websites providing step-by-step solutions for every major math textbook (from 1st to 11th grade) receive millions of hits daily, especially during the exam seasons (OGE/EGE).
Interestingly, some educational experts argue that when used correctly, GDZ acts as a self-check tool . For students whose parents cannot help with advanced geometry or calculus, these sites provide a "roadmap" to understand where they went wrong. 3. Why Mathematics? Mathematics is the most searched subject for GDZ because: