Generation Wuss and related crap
#1681
Boost Pope
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Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,031
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OK, correction:
Exams are supposed to be hard if you're a person of mediocre intellect who hasn't applied themself during the course of the semester, and thinks they can cram it all down in four hours.
Exams are supposed to be hard if you're a person of mediocre intellect who hasn't applied themself during the course of the semester, and thinks they can cram it all down in four hours.
#1682
I always liked the open note/text exams. It was understood that the questions would require application of knowledge, rather than regurgitation.
The notes and textbooks would help you write the equation correctly, but if you didn't already know which one you needed, you didn't have time to read about it.
My professors emphasized that in the real world, you were not expected to memorize things like Bernoulli's equation, but you were expected to understand their proper use.
The 100+ question exams were always much easier than the 2-3 question exams.
The notes and textbooks would help you write the equation correctly, but if you didn't already know which one you needed, you didn't have time to read about it.
My professors emphasized that in the real world, you were not expected to memorize things like Bernoulli's equation, but you were expected to understand their proper use.
The 100+ question exams were always much easier than the 2-3 question exams.
#1683
I always liked the open note/text exams. It was understood that the questions would require application of knowledge, rather than regurgitation.
The notes and textbooks would help you write the equation correctly, but if you didn't already know which one you needed, you didn't have time to read about it.
My professors emphasized that in the real world, you were not expected to memorize things like Bernoulli's equation, but you were expected to understand their proper use.
The 100+ question exams were always much easier than the 2-3 question exams.
The notes and textbooks would help you write the equation correctly, but if you didn't already know which one you needed, you didn't have time to read about it.
My professors emphasized that in the real world, you were not expected to memorize things like Bernoulli's equation, but you were expected to understand their proper use.
The 100+ question exams were always much easier than the 2-3 question exams.
I remember actually getting up a few minutes into a test, handing in a blank piece of paper to the professor and telling him I was dropping the class. He literally asked, more than once, "In XXX's book, in Chapter 7, page 193, what did they say about X?"
That's not learning, that's regurgitation, as you said. It's part of what keeps me from going back to get my Masters.
#1684
Eh, that's not always the case. I had an instructor in my masters program that designed his test so that even when he took it he was barely able to finish it in the allotted time period. It was his first year teaching forensic accounting after 30 years in the FBI. He did grade on a curve and his reasoning was that he would rather challenge every student than write a mediocre test. The first exam was pretty bad for everyone but we all learned that he meant it an did substantially better the next few times. It was my favorite course.
#1685
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,031
Total Cats: 6,596
Unrelated:
You know those carnival sideshow attractions, where they guess your weight?
Someone needs to find an event being held at a snowflake-heavy college (freshman orientation, maybe) and set up a booth offering to guess your gender.
You know those carnival sideshow attractions, where they guess your weight?
Someone needs to find an event being held at a snowflake-heavy college (freshman orientation, maybe) and set up a booth offering to guess your gender.
#1688
Moderator
Thread Starter
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Location: Tampa, Florida
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When my wife heard the premise for that movie she said something like, "How stupid!"
I personally gave up on movies years ago because Hollywood sucks so badly. And additionally they were constantly preaching to me or showing stereotypes of conservatives, flyover country Caucasians, and people with Christian values as the bad guys or complete idiots. I don't have to pay to get insulted. I can come here and get it for free.
I personally gave up on movies years ago because Hollywood sucks so badly. And additionally they were constantly preaching to me or showing stereotypes of conservatives, flyover country Caucasians, and people with Christian values as the bad guys or complete idiots. I don't have to pay to get insulted. I can come here and get it for free.
#1689
Boost Czar
iTrader: (62)
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Chantilly, VA
Posts: 79,498
Total Cats: 4,080
how to 5th grade:
I went k-12 without ever learning about the current president and/or current events...and look how i turned out
One outraged mother is speaking out after finding what she calls anti-Trump doctrine hidden in her 5th grader’s curriculum.
The mother reached out to DANGEROUS after discovering assignments her 11 year old daughter brought home from her English Language Arts class. The English teacher at public school PS5 in Manhattan’s District 6 decided to teach the students about America’s history with Mexico in an apparent effort to indoctrinate them against a border wall.
The incensed mom told DANGEROUS, “District 6 in NYC may either have an ongoing campaign to cripple the analytical skills of students, or it could be that educators we trust with our kids are simply unintelligent. I must unfortunately teach my kids to distrust the information their teachers give them.”
The mother reviewed a worksheet her daughter brought home a few weeks ago. It contained a newsletter from history.com that painted an alternative version of the U.S.’s relationship with Mexico and incomplete accounts of the Mexican-American War that attempted to portray the U.S. as tyrannical, land stealing aggressors, she says.
The mother said the homework assignment included, “A brief description of the U.S immigration policy followed by why Mexicans needed to flee Mexico during the revolution in 1916,” she said.
The worksheet talks about a time where people “passed freely” across the U.S.-Mexico border, except for the “cattle.”
“It described that the first border fence was built to keep cattle in and not keep people out, and that a fence to keep people out was only built in the 1990s after Americans started to become concerned with unlawful immigration.”
This was hardly the first eyebrow raising incident at the publicly-funded New York school, the mom says. In the past, teachers at PS5 had assigned her daughter to go home and watch specific CNN reports about race relations. The school also posts LBGT Pride posters in the hallways for the pre-pubescent students to see. The mother says she’s losing trust in the school to properly educate her daughter and believes they are pushing an agenda to indoctrinate the kids.
She went on to say of the history lesson, “They injected politics into it. The last part of the newsletter talks about Donald Trump’s plans for the big wall to prevent further illegal immigration, and how it’s going to cost more than what President Trump had originally said it would, and that many people think it’s a bad idea.”
Under the section headed “Future Plans for the Border” the worksheet claims, “Many people think it’s a bad idea,” in reference to the wall. It goes on to spell out arguments against the wall, as if it was penned by the Democratic party themselves. The print out ignores all benefits to having a secure boundary between countries. Instead, it tells children how much it will cost and that Congress “has not strongly supported Trump’s wall either.”
At the end of the xeroxed print out, the teacher penned the questions:
“What do you think of Trump’s future plans for the border?”
“What do you think should happen with the future of immigration?”
The mother said her daughter was uncomfortable completing the assignment, afraid that her friends in the heavily Hispanic district wouldn’t like her if she gave her true opinion. Her mother, a conservative and a Trump supporter, found the tactics used in the assignment to be sneaky, and told her daughter she didn’t have to do it if she didn’t want to.
She then sent a note expressing her shock to the teacher, and says she never received a reply.
“The demographic in District 6 is mostly Hispanic, many immigrant children. The newsletter did not include any mention of current issues concerning the border wall, no mention of human trafficking, drug trafficking, violent gangs or terrorists. It did not mention any of the reasons why Americans are concerned about unlawful immigration, and its impact on the United States. Students are left with an impression that President Trump is simply a ‘meanie’, who doesn’t want people like them and their parents to enter the country,” the mother, who happens to be an immigrant herself, said.
“It is alarming to me as a parent that teachers failed, and perhaps purposely failed, to provide the children with sufficient information to examine the pros and cons of a border wall,” she continued.
“Students are taught to agree because of lack of counter argument, instead of being taught to analyze, which would be training them to think critically. And if they did include sufficient information the children would have had to choose between repressing their basic instinct of self-preservation or agreeing with President Trump, which is a ‘bad thing’ in District 6,” the mother told DANGEROUS.
PS5 declined to comment for this article.
The mother reached out to DANGEROUS after discovering assignments her 11 year old daughter brought home from her English Language Arts class. The English teacher at public school PS5 in Manhattan’s District 6 decided to teach the students about America’s history with Mexico in an apparent effort to indoctrinate them against a border wall.
The incensed mom told DANGEROUS, “District 6 in NYC may either have an ongoing campaign to cripple the analytical skills of students, or it could be that educators we trust with our kids are simply unintelligent. I must unfortunately teach my kids to distrust the information their teachers give them.”
The mother reviewed a worksheet her daughter brought home a few weeks ago. It contained a newsletter from history.com that painted an alternative version of the U.S.’s relationship with Mexico and incomplete accounts of the Mexican-American War that attempted to portray the U.S. as tyrannical, land stealing aggressors, she says.
The mother said the homework assignment included, “A brief description of the U.S immigration policy followed by why Mexicans needed to flee Mexico during the revolution in 1916,” she said.
The worksheet talks about a time where people “passed freely” across the U.S.-Mexico border, except for the “cattle.”
“It described that the first border fence was built to keep cattle in and not keep people out, and that a fence to keep people out was only built in the 1990s after Americans started to become concerned with unlawful immigration.”
This was hardly the first eyebrow raising incident at the publicly-funded New York school, the mom says. In the past, teachers at PS5 had assigned her daughter to go home and watch specific CNN reports about race relations. The school also posts LBGT Pride posters in the hallways for the pre-pubescent students to see. The mother says she’s losing trust in the school to properly educate her daughter and believes they are pushing an agenda to indoctrinate the kids.
She went on to say of the history lesson, “They injected politics into it. The last part of the newsletter talks about Donald Trump’s plans for the big wall to prevent further illegal immigration, and how it’s going to cost more than what President Trump had originally said it would, and that many people think it’s a bad idea.”
Under the section headed “Future Plans for the Border” the worksheet claims, “Many people think it’s a bad idea,” in reference to the wall. It goes on to spell out arguments against the wall, as if it was penned by the Democratic party themselves. The print out ignores all benefits to having a secure boundary between countries. Instead, it tells children how much it will cost and that Congress “has not strongly supported Trump’s wall either.”
At the end of the xeroxed print out, the teacher penned the questions:
“What do you think of Trump’s future plans for the border?”
“What do you think should happen with the future of immigration?”
The mother said her daughter was uncomfortable completing the assignment, afraid that her friends in the heavily Hispanic district wouldn’t like her if she gave her true opinion. Her mother, a conservative and a Trump supporter, found the tactics used in the assignment to be sneaky, and told her daughter she didn’t have to do it if she didn’t want to.
She then sent a note expressing her shock to the teacher, and says she never received a reply.
“The demographic in District 6 is mostly Hispanic, many immigrant children. The newsletter did not include any mention of current issues concerning the border wall, no mention of human trafficking, drug trafficking, violent gangs or terrorists. It did not mention any of the reasons why Americans are concerned about unlawful immigration, and its impact on the United States. Students are left with an impression that President Trump is simply a ‘meanie’, who doesn’t want people like them and their parents to enter the country,” the mother, who happens to be an immigrant herself, said.
“It is alarming to me as a parent that teachers failed, and perhaps purposely failed, to provide the children with sufficient information to examine the pros and cons of a border wall,” she continued.
“Students are taught to agree because of lack of counter argument, instead of being taught to analyze, which would be training them to think critically. And if they did include sufficient information the children would have had to choose between repressing their basic instinct of self-preservation or agreeing with President Trump, which is a ‘bad thing’ in District 6,” the mother told DANGEROUS.
PS5 declined to comment for this article.
#1700
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,031
Total Cats: 6,596
I thought of a really evil idea earlier today:
Skinheads / neo-***** can get a free pass from SJWs by describing themselves as "assigned white at birth."
All of the snowflakes will sublimate.
Skinheads / neo-***** can get a free pass from SJWs by describing themselves as "assigned white at birth."
All of the snowflakes will sublimate.