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Sad and funny all at the same time.
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Sad, and I've found the 300+ page owners manual is sometimes of no help.
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There was also probably a time valve adjusting was assigned to the "slow" kid just after he was sent up the street for blinker fluid.
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Mike that's funny but lawyers have a lot to do with the battery drinking thing. I guess someone had to do it to file a law suit.
Last edited by wsinsle (12/06/2024 5:27 PM)
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But I saw on the internet that there was water in batteries?!
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Watching the videos where someone asks random students on campus or random people out in public basic questions makes me sad to see the general knowledge level of Americans these days. If you haven't seen any of these, just search for something like "asking simple questions".
Here is just one example:
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Well, consider there are about 260 million Americans 18 and older, yet only about 150 million of them voted in our last election. It makes it easier to understand why people often don't know who the president or vice president is. Knowledge is power, but many seem to prefer weakness.
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What knowledge actually fills the heads of these young people that are unable to do simple math, tell time on a clock or answer basic questions correctly? I'm left wondering how they graduated high school and got accepted into college without these simple skills...I know they must have normal brains... so what have they filled their heads with??
Edit... Do colleges still use SAT scores as part of the acceptance criteria?
Edit 2: I just looked up info about the current SAT test... It now allows the use of a calculator for the math portion. Well that explains part of the lack of math skills in these college students. But since the questions in the videos are so simple, it doesn't really explain it.
Last edited by Rufus68 (12/07/2024 11:16 AM)
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Education is vastly different than when we were in school. In some ways kids are learning certain skills far younger (like basic algebra), but in others they seem to not learn at all (like times tables). A large part of this is that kids were doing badly on testing in high school, so they started introducing skills deemed necessary earlier, and this backs all the way into kindergarten.
My understanding is that a lot has changed with the SAT. For one, it no longer stands for anything. Someone felt the word "aptitude" was discriminatory or some woke nonsense. The index is now 2200 I believe, so if we tell kids today what our scores were we look dumb, because they don't know the index used to be 1600. Colleges look at the scores, but they are not as critically used as in our day.
IMO what we have lost in education are logic and civics. We are not teaching kids to be critical thinkers or problem solvers in school, so if you want your kids to have those skills you are going to have to teach it to them yourself. Ditto for how the government works and what documents like the Constitution and the Bill or Rights really mean.
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Seems to reinforce the current condition of the dumbing down of America. Did all the contestants get a participation trophy?
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Welp, didn't freak out Tom, but the current max SAT score is 1600, again.
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Danm son
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I don’t think I am ready for college yet.
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rpm wrote:
Welp, didn't freak out Tom, but the current max SAT score is 1600, again.
Good, and hopefully they don't get partial credit for thinking an answer identified as being correct, even though it wasn't. I also know a guy who topped 1600 in my day. He put down all the correct answers and got a 1600, but he also pointed out a mistake on the test.
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I still substitute teach at the high school down the road about once a week. I like to chat with the kids about what their future plans are and sometimes the SAT comes up in conversation. About 5 years ago I was asking some of the students if they had taken the test, and they said I should ask a particular student what score he achieved on the test. The youngster scored a perfect 2400, and I asked him in what year of high school he was. Brainiac was a freshman.
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Curiosity got me to reading about the history of the SAT test. In 2005 the VERBAL section was broken into a READING section and a WRITING section making 3 sections in total. This is what raised the score to 2400 from the previous 1600. Then in 2016 the SAT was changed back to a 2 section test returning the score to 1600.
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rpm wrote:
I still substitute teach at the high school down the road about once a week.
I'm curious Bob, what subject(s) do you teach?
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Mach1Driver wrote:
rpm wrote:
I still substitute teach at the high school down the road about once a week.
I'm curious Bob, what subject(s) do you teach?
I'll sub for any subject Terry, but I'm smart enough to know that I'm a substitute teacher, not a teacher. If a student has a question I can't answer I'll ask who the smartest kid in the class is, and have them help. I pretty much take roll and make sure the kids don't stab each other in the neck. Kidding. I honestly don't know how real teachers do it, having to put up with the administration and especially the parents. It didn't take me long to realize that the special ed parents were some of the worst.
I sub about once a week and get jobs from a group of teachers who contact me directly. I enjoy the interaction with the kids, and it's restored my faith in the youth. Although we'll never have a shortage of hamburger flippers.
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rpm wrote:
Mach1Driver wrote:
rpm wrote:
I still substitute teach at the high school down the road about once a week.
I'm curious Bob, what subject(s) do you teach?
I'll sub for any subject Terry, but I'm smart enough to know that I'm a substitute teacher, not a teacher. If a student has a question I can't answer I'll ask who the smartest kid in the class is, and have them help. I pretty much take roll and make sure the kids don't stab each other in the neck. Kidding. I honestly don't know how real teachers do it, having to put up with the administration and especially the parents. It didn't take me long to realize that the special ed parents were some of the worst.
I sub about once a week and get jobs from a group of teachers who contact me directly. I enjoy the interaction with the kids, and it's restored my faith in the youth. Although we'll never have a shortage of hamburger flippers.
Good for you. Well done!
Last edited by Mach1Driver (12/09/2024 12:13 PM)
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rpm wrote:
I sub about once a week and get jobs from a group of teachers who contact me directly. I enjoy the interaction with the kids, and it's restored my faith in the youth. Although we'll never have a shortage of hamburger flippers.
Your choice of using that last line to convey your assessment made me chuckle.
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rpm wrote:
Mach1Driver wrote:
rpm wrote:
I still substitute teach at the high school down the road about once a week.
I'm curious Bob, what subject(s) do you teach?
I'll sub for any subject Terry, but I'm smart enough to know that I'm a substitute teacher, not a teacher. If a student has a question I can't answer I'll ask who the smartest kid in the class is, and have them help. I pretty much take roll and make sure the kids don't stab each other in the neck. Kidding. I honestly don't know how real teachers do it, having to put up with the administration and especially the parents. It didn't take me long to realize that the special ed parents were some of the worst.
I sub about once a week and get jobs from a group of teachers who contact me directly. I enjoy the interaction with the kids, and it's restored my faith in the youth. Although we'll never have a shortage of hamburger flippers.
My wife's been a teacher for 22 years. I don't know how she does it either. Special Ed teachers don't wait in line to get in heaven. My mother-in-law was one for over 30 years. The best was when she had to go back and take new certification tests, which included expertise in a variety of subjects she never taught and never would.
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