Is it possible for a 23 year-old college student to pass an assignment when he can barely string together a sentence? The answer is “yes.”


AdBrite Ad Here



Comments

These comments in RSS.
Comment View Threshold:
avatar
[VaMpIrE^F00D], on 5/6/2008 9:26:46 AM
Total Posts: 868, Joined: 1/4/2006
Yeah this is why government targets are a bad thing, people fear their jobs if they don't reach targets when the institutions don't take into account that there are actually lesser intelligent people out there.

The comparison of international education doesn't help at all as countries are cross compared as not being as good, when really what these 'figures' don't take into account is different minorities, ethnicities and cultures.
 |  Comment Score: Neutral  |  Edit Comment
avatar
LithuanianLabourer, on 5/6/2008 10:02:36 AM
Total Posts: 52, Joined: 3/1/2007
Ha ha , I still remember our history teacher . He would teach the history the way he knew it happened and not the way Board of Education wanted teachers to teach it .

Secondly he would tell any student not listening to him to get the fuck out and fail without mercy those who didn't know the subject in the end . Some of his students were winning national competitions in History .
 |  Comment Score: Neutral  |  Edit Comment
finalflash, on 5/6/2008 10:11:05 AM
Total Posts: 320, Joined: 5/16/2006
What government targets?? They fackin removed the damn science and even math sections of standardized state tests in some state. How the flyin fuck is the US population supposed to catch up to and compete with the "Illegal Immigrants" much less the legal ones. It is SO fackin over for the US.
 |  Comment Score: Neutral  |  Edit Comment
avatar
cowpants, on 5/6/2008 10:12:40 AM
Total Posts: 835, Joined: 7/5/2006
Speaking as a teacher, I couldn't agree more with you, bulshoy. There are far too many teachers, schools and colleges out there that are much too afraid of looking bad if they fail students. This is one of the reasons why, in many parts, an apprenticeship and verifiable work experience are beginning to hold more value over college and university degrees.
 |  Comment Score: Neutral  |  Edit Comment
Immaculate1, on 5/6/2008 10:13:58 AM
Total Posts: 6996, Joined: 7/16/2006
Same happens here in Holland right now. There is sort of a scandal going on right now about the fact that teachers themselves are not fit enough to teach pupils. Some basic school teachers have a big problem doing basic maths or proper grammar themselves. And then there's the fact that they are also evaluated by their superiors on the number of pupils passed. So they let bad pupils pass too. It's a downwards spiral originated by those who set the standards, ie the politicians.
 |  Comment Score: Neutral  |  Edit Comment
avatar
Scobiewan, on 5/6/2008 10:25:14 AM
Total Posts: 594, Joined: 6/22/2006
i red de storei and i do'nt sea wats rong wid it and i kiek collage mi teechr sais i am vary clevar do to mai big hed
 |  Comment Score: Neutral  |  Edit Comment
avatar
jazzbone85, on 5/6/2008 10:28:04 AM
Total Posts: 65, Joined: 4/24/2006
It's simple to see why he passed; the administrator in the article summed it up very well, except for leaving one point out.

Schools that do well on test scores get more money. If a teacher grades the kids without padding at all, I can guarantee you that the grades will be horrendous. Should they be padded? No, I don't think so. Am I guilty of padding? you bet.

Before I went back to grad school I was a music teacher at a middle-school in New York State. I taught band, orchestra, and general music classes. When it came time to grade the kids for general music the class average was a 70.4 with approximately eight of the twenty-one kids receiving failing grades.

Seeing this, I made a slight change to the formula and made the participation/attendance portion of their grade higher, and ta-da! now only three kids failed - much better.

Looking back on this, I realize it was a mistake and I regret falling prey to the temptation to "look better" as a teacher. The fact of the matter was that I was a good teacher for those kids, and a lot of them learned a lot - even those that failed. Their failure was their own fault; not mine.
 |  Comment Score: Neutral  |  Edit Comment
avatar
bulshoy, on 5/6/2008 10:36:32 AM
Total Posts: 6128, Joined: 11/15/2005
"Their failure was their own fault; not mine."

Indeed, but they're not going to realize this if they pass.
 |  Comment Score: Neutral  |  Edit Comment
avatar
mrbig4545, on 5/6/2008 10:40:49 AM
Total Posts: 115, Joined: 8/14/2006
When I was doing A Level (about 5 years ago now) I did my Chemistry coursework in about 10 mins and handed it in, I figured it was good enough, but got a U off the teacher. So I properly re-did it and got a A+.

My point is, if I hadn't have been given the U, I would have never redone it, and wouldn't have learned anything. These days I just do a proper job first time round, and thats why (saves time in the long run!)

So failing is good, as long as you sort it out! (A wise man sees failure as progress, while a fool divorces his knowledge and misses the logic - Can-i-bus)
 |  Comment Score: Neutral  |  Edit Comment
avatar
Fido, on 5/6/2008 10:41:33 AM
Total Posts: 3373, Joined: 1/3/2007
What's an adamation? I showed this to a couple friends and us was wondering.
 |  Comment Score: Neutral  |  Edit Comment
Comments per page: 10

Post your comments

 

Your Message:

This system allows you to use html-like tags in replacement of HTML. These tags are easier to use and are widely supported on messageboard systems.

HTML DISABLED
CODE DISABLED

 

You must be a registered user in order to post comments.
Please sign in or create a new account.

Your Ad Here
Xxoozero
bulshoy
Dock
ThisisJeff
LifeRiot
Romanov
Shoutwire channels