"What did students do before chatgpt?"

a year ago by Interstellar_1 to c/curatedtumblr

antonim 110 points a year ago

"what did students do before chatgpt?"

Is this supposed to be an actual quote? Like, someone said this unironically?

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JayGray91 57 points a year ago

"what did students do before smartphones/tablets?"
"what did students do before laptops?"
"what did students do before the internet?"

it's not at all weird to me that this could have been uttered fully seriously.

Edit: only difference are those other technologies still requires critical thinking and won't magically write your assignments. Unless plagiarized.

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DagwoodIII 28 points a year ago

Grew up before the internet.

One thing I have come to realize is how much of history I learned passively from movies and comic books. The first time I saw Edgar Allan Poe was in an The Atom comic, and Julius Cesar was in a cartoon. Pretty much everyone I knew first hear classical music when they played it behind Bugs Bunny.

These days, there's a tiny handful of historically based shows and movies compared to earlier times.

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grissino 12 points a year ago

'... and Julius Cesar was in a cartoon.'

Asterix taught me a lot of history too 😁

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DragonTypeWyvern 7 points a year ago

It was wrong but the vibes were there!

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Booboofinget 10 points a year ago

Not only that, but it sparked the interest. I lost count of how many things I saw in cartoons, comics, movies and TV shows that I simply had to know more about.

Another bygone method of learning things was by thumbing through the pages of an illustrated encyclopedia, like Golden Book Encyclopedia.

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sanpo 12 points a year ago

I have no doubt about it...

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sp3ctr4l 3 points a year ago

Yep.

Parts of Gen Z, and a lot of Gen A, will 100% seriously tell you that learning basically anything other than how to prompt ChatGPT is a stupid waste of time.

They'll all go feral when they can no longer afford it or the power goes out or the system crashes for a significant amount of time, as they've never learned how to think, nor anything useful to think about.

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Honytawk -29 points a year ago

Well of course. LLMs have been able to automate so many bullshit assignments for students. I am not talking about the ones where they actually have to learn about a subject that is important to things in life. But the ones where the entire point of the assignment is to write pages.

Education still hasn't caught up with the many technological advances in the latest years. Some still act like it are the 1950's.

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markovs_gun 47 points a year ago

Did you read the OP? The point is, writing pages of bullshit is how you get better at writing. It's like saying "Oh yeah I don't want to do all these bullshit exercises at the gym too build muscle I should just sit at home and let a robot do them for me" the whole point is building the skill not producing the assignment.

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Honytawk -17 points a year ago

Yes I read it, and what I am saying is that modern day users don't need to be able to write bullshit because of all the advances in technology.

Give purposeful assignment instead. You still get people to write and they learn something as well. 2 birds with 1 stone.

It is like forcing students to come to school using a steam train because they will know how to keep a steam engine working so it makes them better at shoveling.

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Genius 22 points a year ago

The ability to construct a logical argument is useful not just for communicating with others, but also for structuring your own thoughts.

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JollyG 7 points a year ago

I never had a single assignment in college where the only point was to write pages.

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TheBat 1 point a year ago
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salacious_coaster 94 points a year ago

We haven't had LLMs that long. Are people seriously already forgetting the concept of learning skills?

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Tar_alcaran 67 points a year ago

Nah, people have been cheating and faking it forever.

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bridgeenjoyer 23 points a year ago

It makes the dumb even dumber. In 10 years we will see the effect of it, just like ipad babies.

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khornechips 15 points a year ago

Hate to be that guy, but you’re looking for effect here. You’re describing the effect (end result) of a change, not the affect (change) itself.

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bridgeenjoyer 6 points a year ago

Haha yes, was typing too quickly.

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khornechips 1 point a year ago
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djsoren19 21 points a year ago

In the U.S., the issue is that our education system is already fundamentally broken and doing a terrible job of teaching kids. Adding LLMs to that is like striking a match in the tinderbox.

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YoSoySnekBoi 20 points a year ago

I teach collegiate intro programming classes, I can say it definitely seems that way. My office hours will be an absolute ghost town, nobody has any questions for me in class, and then when a project is due about 1/3 of the submissions are AI slop.

I know cheating has always been rampant, but I've never seen it this bad before.

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merc 6 points a year ago

Are you allowed to fail them? Everything I've heard about primary and secondary school in the US is that teachers can no longer punish or fail to pass students who are cheating or failing or have major disciplinary problems. I hope that it's different after high school.

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YoSoySnekBoi 4 points a year ago

I was told specifically to give them a second chance at the assignment for 50% credit. No disciplinary action was taken on the part of the administration with the justification that "if they really don't know the material they'll fail the final."

So no, it's just as bad in higher education here.

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merc 2 points a year ago

The future looks bright.

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JayGray91 11 points a year ago

at least it took a bit more effort than just a prompt or two.

lucky if your search terms just bring up someone else's work I suppose lol

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swelter_spark 1 point a year ago

Since computers became common, it's seemed like an increasing number of people don't know how to, and don't think they should have to, learn skills.

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aeternum 87 points a year ago
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Klear 47 points a year ago

It's called git gudding now.

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Valmond 17 points a year ago

git -f gud

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Klear 8 points a year ago

Isn't that gud gitting?

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jcg 2 points a year ago

I dunno the man page lists it as git-gud

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NikkiDimes -7 points a year ago

I think using ChatGPT for learning is okay, assuming the user is actually interested in learning. If you just want to get something done, you're absolutely cheating the task at hand, and your future self.

ChatGPT truly shines when you ask it follow-up questions on the thing you want to learn about and really "delve" (hate that AI ass word) into different aspects to internalize them yourself.

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lorty 14 points a year ago

The dangerous part is that it makes stuff up and you won't have the knowledge to tell.

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fishy 8 points a year ago

Exactly. I had a colleague who searched for a question about a retail math formula. The LLM returned a result that was close but slightly wrong. She spent two weeks with incorrect numbers for her baseline and as a result her forecasts were all wrong. When reviewing her numbers, everything was just a little wonky so I dug into it and discovered her mistake. She was absolutely dumbfounded the "AI" even could be wrong and tried to argue that I was incorrect. Dug out my old retail math cheat sheet and showed her the correct formula.

I haven't used LLM's for anything since. Gotta validate all that shit anyways, so why use it at all?

These things will be fantastic for taking my order at the drive thru and in a few other applications, but if you're trying to learn from them; don't.

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captainlezbian 1 point a year ago

I was a kid in the era of separate pocket calculators, so I've heard so much of this song and dance before. Even with deterministic tools that always work barring user error you need to have enough understanding that you can tell when something is off and to properly frame the problem

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NikkiDimes 0 points a year ago

Well, yeah, you have to have a brain and actually verify things. It's like Wikipedia circa 2004.

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breecher 4 points a year ago

Except when it lies. Then it is the opposite of what you want it to be.

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Empricorn 54 points a year ago

My nephew wants to be instantly good at things and it drives me crazy. He'll roll his eyes and say "of course you're going to make that shot (in billiards) or get frustrated that's he's not amazing without practicing in martial arts, video games, golf, fitness, etc. I'm sure he'll grow out of it, but in the meantime he won't work at it or accept instruction. I'm like "yeah dude, I've done this thousands of times. Let me help you!"

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vivendi 40 points a year ago

Teach him to fail. Those kids are afraid of failing because somewhere in life someone traumatized them so they don't like to ever fail at anything.

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Flocklesscrow 13 points a year ago

*teach him to grow from failure

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vivendi 8 points a year ago

In order to grow from failure one must learn to fail

That first lesson was so hard to learn

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Empricorn 12 points a year ago

I'm his uncle. Of course he's familiar with failure!

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AFKBRBChocolate 30 points a year ago

My youngest (now 27) has a bit of a problem with that. The issue is that he's smart and most things always came easy to him. He'd do those giant writing assignments the night before that are supposed to be worked on for weeks and still get the high grade. Hardly ever seemed to study, but got solid A's. But when something comes along that he's not automatically good at, he gets super frustrated. He wanted to learn the guitar in high school (I play a little), so we bought him one and some basic instruction, but he hated it because it didn't come naturally. It's a decoration on his wall.

I will give him this though: he decided a few years back that he wanted to learn to draw, and that didn't come naturally, but he's continued to work at it and has gotten pretty decent. So it's something a person can get past.

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wisely 21 points a year ago
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AFKBRBChocolate 9 points a year ago

My wife is really smart and says she just "sees" the answer to math problems. Ask her to multiple two 3-digit numbers and she does it quickly in her head. Was never like that for me, I always have to work the process even for simple things, it's never obvious. I got a CS degree with a math minor, and took some pretty high level math classes. It was always the same for me: learn the process, then work it through, whether it's number theory or multiplying two numbers.

My wife didn't get a degree, but she went back to school as an adult. When she got to the first math class that had symbolic/algebraic notation, she ground to a halt initially. She couldn't just see the answer, and she had no practice working through the process. Was a real slog for her.

Being brilliant is a gift, but you need to learn to work the mental muscles too.

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Iteria 8 points a year ago

This is basically why I believe that effortless As in grade school are a failure state for kids. People tell me that mu standards are too high for my kid, but I cannot express to them that now is the time for my kid to build up the ability to struggle and persevere. It's not that I have high standards. I just think that a perfect score is a sign that the task wasn't hard enough.

I saw way too many kids burn out in college because they'd never seem a grade below an A before, let alone the C they just scored. Since I was used to being pushed to my limit in grade school (not by my mother, but by teachers), I was fully prepared to work hard to barely make a B sometimes.

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SolarBoy 1 point a year ago

I think the Jungian concept of the Puer Aeternus describes this very well.

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DrSteveBrule 7 points a year ago

I think the difference with his guitar playing and drawing was that he probably just didn't enjoy learning guitar. Tons of people buy an instrument to only learn later that they didn't like it as much as they thought. Not trying to say you don't know your kid, just pointing out that learning an art requires an interest to put into it. It can definitely be frustrating to realize that you aren't as interested in the learning process of something you had dreams of being good at.

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AFKBRBChocolate 11 points a year ago

I hear what you're saying, but I honestly think it was just motivation and maturity. I gave you two examples, but there were a number of things that he got very frustrated about when they didn't come easily. Some were school subjects, so he didn't have a choice and had to keep pushing at it, and would eventually get there. In fact, he didn't learn those things more slowly than anyone else, it was just that he was used to getting things instantly.

There's zero doubt in my mind that he would enjoy the guitar, but he wasn't mature enough to get past the initial frustration at the time.

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Empricorn 3 points a year ago

That's good to hear, and I'm glad your kid is figuring it out! Very good point about those that are gifted sometimes needing to work harder at learning to, uh, learn.

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wisely 3 points a year ago
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AFKBRBChocolate 1 point a year ago

That's certainly a possibility.

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rustydrd 16 points a year ago

"I fear not the man who has practiced 10,000 kicks once, but I fear the man who has practiced one kick 10,000 times." - Bruce Lee

Edit, in the same spirit: "The difference between a novice and a master is that the master has failed more times than the novice has even tried." - No idea who

Follow me for more Karate Kid-level inspirational quotes.

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Empricorn 7 points a year ago

Subscribe

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rustydrd 7 points a year ago

"Every champion was once a contender who refused to give up." - Rocky Balboa

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nieminen 6 points a year ago

Subscribe

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kayohtie 10 points a year ago

I love the feeling of neurons rewiring to form a new pathway of understanding. Or whatever the hell it is. At 38, it's a pleasure finding I can still learn and build new skills.

Playing Beat Saber and hitting a plateau only to find my focus starts to evaporate over the course of a hard track as I find that flow, that path to just being in it, each skill plateau merely being temporary, is great. Playing guitar and slowly starting to wire my brain for the pathway for barre chords and faster movement along the frets is a crazy feeling. That sense of finally finding the pathways for singing to operate even SLIGHTLY separately from the rhythm of the guitar, those glimpses of polyrhythm? Addicting.

If you're able, I hope you can teach him to find that pleasure of not mastery, but evolving strengths. Maybe it's like an RPG where skills can be leveled up over time the more you use them. I know all too well the frustration of imperfection to start, ADHD during the 90s and the whole "perfect student" pressure created a lot I had to undo and still am, but each time I can break free of that it's rewarding.

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Empricorn 2 points a year ago

Well said. I will certainly do my best! 🫡

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mrgoosmoos 8 points a year ago

idk man. my ex was like this at 30. she just gave up on stuff if she wasn't good at it immediately. made it very difficult to do things together

it was kind of weird because in most other aspects she was very mature. but not that one.

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edgemaster72 5 points a year ago

I'm 39 and I want to be instantly good at things. It sucks. Good luck breaking your nephew out of it.

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Soup 2 points a year ago

Find things that don’t matter as much and work from there.

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Gradually_Adjusting 51 points a year ago

It's not snide to say "skills are developed with practise". You want to de-skill by letting an idiot machine say wrong stuff while you rot? Go ahead.

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LovableSidekick 42 points a year ago

Can confirm, in college I mostly partied and screwed around, but thanks to years of practice at procrastination I had by then developed the skill of throwing anything together at the last minute. So I could go to the library after dinner the night before a paper was due, find the right shelf, grab a handful of books and write a rough draft of an essay in couple hours. Back in the dorm by 10pm, I would make some edits, type it up (this was in the typewriter era), and turn it in on time for at least a B. But like I said, this was after years of putting off assignments in elementary and high school. Turns out this is an extremely valuable skill in office environments, where due to poor planning there's frequently some crisis that has to be solved ASAFP. People who can come through with decent work under completely unrealistic deadline pressure become all-stars. LPT: if you're actually doing that and not getting the credit and rewards you deserve, move somewhere else - you've valuable.

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ChickenLadyLovesLife 22 points a year ago

People who can come through with decent work under completely unrealistic deadline pressure become all-stars.

I did this for my last company. We were about to lose our biggest client because we (not including me) had agreed to an impossible deadline to deliver a piece of software for them. I spent two weeks basically living at work and we (meaning mostly I) were able to deliver a bare-minimum product on time and keep our contract with the client alive. This kept our company intact long enough for us to be acquired by a major west coast tech giant - at which point I was rewarded with a layoff notice, while my bosses got millions in stock grants. I got a severance which was basically equal to what I would have been eligible to get from unemployment, which meant I didn't get any unemployment but at least I didn't have to pretend to look for work for six months.

I did it with no illusions about what my reward might or might not be. I just don't like being involved in any way with project failures.

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jjjalljs 10 points a year ago

We were about to lose our biggest client because we (not including me) had agreed to an impossible deadline to deliver a piece of software for them. I spent two weeks basically living at work and we (meaning mostly I) were able to deliver a bare-minimum product on time and keep our contract with the client alive. This kept our company intact long enough for us to be acquired by a major west coast tech giant - at which point I was rewarded with a layoff notice, while my bosses got millions in stock grants.

Did this radicalize you? This would have radicalized me.

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ChickenLadyLovesLife 6 points a year ago

I was radicalized in the '80s. Nothing has surprised me since then.

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jollyroberts 39 points a year ago

I had a friend in high school who did the hand drawing exercise, it does work. He got really good at drawing hands.

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kandoh 41 points a year ago

It works for everything. My dad made me tie a thousand knots because my shoelaces kept coming untied and now as an adult I am super in-demand in our local bdsm scene.

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Xaphanos 21 points a year ago

That did not go where I thought it would.

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lost_faith 11 points a year ago

Boy scouts can lead to the same outcome

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GraniteM 1 point a year ago

Father of the year!

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NABDad 16 points a year ago

...everything else looked like shit, but the hands were amazing!

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NikkiDimes 6 points a year ago

That's honestly how everything works. Nobody starts good at anything. If you want to be good at something, you have to suck first. You have to fail over and over and over again and learn a tiny bit each time as you hone your craft.

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MeThisGuy 4 points a year ago

not hard to be better than AI at drawing hands

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Akasazh 1 point a year ago

Also: being able to draw hands is the most important identifier of not being an ai.

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Kolanaki 31 points a year ago

Using chatgpt to do your school work is like paying/beating up a nerd to do your work for you. You won't learn shit, and there is a chance you'll get in trouble for cheating.

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rumschlumpel 17 points a year ago

Except, the nerd will probably do the school work correctly.

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Kolanaki 5 points a year ago

Not if they are smart enough to know it would be suspicious if the dumb student suddenly started getting 100℅, so they purposely fudge a few answers.

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fckreddit 24 points a year ago

The best thing about being a human is that you can learn anything you want, to accomplish what you need to. Want to create an app, a framework, but don't know how to code? Guess what, you can learn how to code. Want to write a story or an essay? You can learn how to write. Learning to satiate my curiosity about something; learning something so that I can accomplish something are the best things about my life. That is how I learnt programming. I don't want anything to replace that for me, especially not some shit-generating LLM.

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Xaphanos 12 points a year ago

"A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects."

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RememberTheApollo_ 23 points a year ago

ChatGPT land this plane with the engine failed for me. ChatGPT do this triple bypass heat surgery for me.

I’m sure that people will come up with excuses why this is different than cheating on an essay, but the point is that if one can’t study for the basic shit then doing the hard shit is going to be even harder. It’s not flipping a switch and saying “ok now I’ll take it all seriously…”. Then again, someone shirking basic work skills is probably destined for a retail middle manager job and not someone headed for radiology.

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drool 7 points a year ago

ChatGPT land this plane with the engine failed for me

How bad is this on a scale of 1 to 100?

95 out of 100 This is catastrophic. Here's why it's a 95:

Landing Impact (40 points):

  • Belly flopped onto a chicken farm
  • Left wing occupied as a nesting box

Passenger Experience (35 points):

  • Emergency slide covered in yolk
  • Free eggs for all

...----

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captain_aggravated 5 points a year ago

I'm a pilot and flight instructor. When I was a teenager, I would neglect English and Math homework to read my private pilot textbook.

See, there's this guy named Edward Thorndike who described several basic principles of learning, including the Principle of Readiness. See, learning is an active process, takes effort to do, and effort sucks. So people will only endure the suck of effort if they genuinely believe they'll get anything out of it. Students will best learn a lesson if they understand the value of the lesson to them in their lives. No, "you'll never know when algebra will save your life" is not good enough. No, "Someday this might come in handy" isn't good enough. Because of quiz-based game shows with million dollar cash prizes, that applies to literally everything from Mayan architecture to the seventh season of Friends.

My lived experience with essay writing is it was almost always an exercise in pointless pedantry. Thirteen years of public school and five years of college, I was almost always graded on punctuation, grammar, spelling, and strict adherence to the MLA style guide. One of the few essays that was graded for content was in an engineering class I took. We were to research a notable engineering failure, where something bad happened and an engineer was at fault. I chose the McDonnell-Douglas DC-10 cargo door and the two in-flight emergencies it caused. I cited the actual NTSB reports and the Applegate memo. Of all the essays I wrote for English teachers, I don't remember the topic of a single one, my memories of writing them involve "Okay when it's a periodical, the title is italicized, but when it's in a journal..."

When teachers answer "Why do we have to learn this" with "it's required for your diploma" literally don't learn it. It is a mandatory waste of time designed to either be a bullshit tolerance exercise or included because it aesthetically resembles academics.

That doesn't happen in aviation curricula because flying a plane fucking matters and there's a point to everything we teach. Under part 61, anyway. Part 65 is full of horse shit. I went to mechanic school and learned there's no such thing as an aircraft that's safe to fly. I build furniture now.

What were we talking about?

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Phen 23 points a year ago

I remember a comic I read at some point long ago, where power had gone out and a bored kid asks his grandma: "what did you do before TVs existed?" and the grandma says: "we would just sit around and wait for TVs to be invented".

I'm now using that answer everytime I see a "what did you do before ___ was invented?"

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paultimate14 14 points a year ago

I get the point, but often the answer to "what did you do before ___ was invented?" Is "we suffered and died". Like vaccines for example.

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Jiggle_Physics 12 points a year ago

"before tv was invented? Well we went out with other kids, where adults weren't around, and got into trouble. As we got older we started fucking, and drinking, and getting into more serious trouble."

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miked 7 points a year ago

I did all that after TV was invented.

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Jiggle_Physics 3 points a year ago

Same, also after the internet, and social media. However a lot less people are compared to when I was a child.

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AFKBRBChocolate 9 points a year ago

Some of those things are pretty double-edged though. I grew up pre-Internet. Today, if a group of friends are standing around and someone says, "I heard that platypus eat bats," someone will whip out their phone and say that's bullshit in 30 seconds. Back in the day, we could ride our bikes to the library and find out, or maybe someone's parents had encyclopedias, but we usually just didn't care that much. On the other hand, because stuff wasn't right at our fingertips, we had to reason a lot more things out. I feel like our critical thinking skills were better. Someone was bound to say, "Bats? How would that work? They live in the water and bats fly around eating bugs. I'm not buying it."

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Valmond 4 points a year ago

And then there were those who had less good critical thinking skills and believed in lots of let's say interesting things.

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AFKBRBChocolate 4 points a year ago

Yep, those folks have always been around. There was a weird thing when email became widespread. It turns out that there are (at least were) people who will reject a stupid thing if someone says it to them, but will believe the same stupid thing if they see it written. A giant number of early viral emails were things like "According to the New York Times, gangs are targeting people who wear people shoes." Of course, the NYT never said that, it was all bullshit, but all sorts of people would swear it was true because papers were reporting it.

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Zapados 19 points a year ago

Cocaine

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foggianism 2 points a year ago

wrong post, ma man

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tigeruppercut 27 points a year ago path: 0 18370732 18371643 18373219, hotness: undefined, score: 27, children: 1
ErmahgherdDavid 2 points a year ago
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AlolanYoda 6 points a year ago

I think it's an appropriate response to the title, like in a grammatical sense, it just makes me worry about what kind of students that commenter encountered on a day to day basis

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bizzle 13 points a year ago

Wait do you mean to tell me that constantly slacking and taking the easy way will make me dumb and lazy?

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edgemaster72 2 points a year ago

I may be dumb and lazy, but at least I'm not, wait, what was the third thing?

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Pratai 8 points a year ago
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pebbles 7 points a year ago

I am here to call out the natural/unnatural fallocy. It is silly. Can you really draw a line between the two (natural vs unnatural) in a way that is logical and still supports your argument?

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Pratai 1 point a year ago
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pebbles 2 points a year ago

Ah fair. I was confused by the language. I thought you were saying broadly that AI was bad because it is unnatural rather than because it is cultural / technological.

I still don't think you've made a good case though. We have lots of tech that had us think less that didn't lead to the end of humanity. What would make AI special enough to end us? People have felt apocalyptic about a lot of things.

From my perspective the issues aren't about AI itself. The issue is that a small group of folks control our society and how tech gets used.

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vithigar 1 point a year ago

What do you mean by "regress"? Is the Mexican tetra un-evolving its eyes not a regression?

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Pratai 1 point a year ago
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drunkpostdisaster 5 points a year ago

Zoomers are worse the fucking boomers and alphas are going to be worse still.

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gandalf_der_12te 5 points a year ago

before chatgpt i simply didn't do all homework; if it was too tedious i said "fuck it" and left it out.

obviously that tanked my grades but i'm not in school to get good grades, i'm in school to learn interesting stuff.

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Speiser0 5 points a year ago

Can we please talk about the profile picture of lierdumoa?

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NoPanko 6 points a year ago

Its a famous rock formation, you’ll never guess how it got famous.

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Hansae 2 points a year ago

Nein

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Speiser0 1 point a year ago

9?

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fossilesque 2 points a year ago

Niet.

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Hansae 3 points a year ago

Нет

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HalfSalesman 4 points a year ago

The issue is that only some of them intrinsically want to get gud. They want other people to do the shit they don't want to do. They're happy to let a robot do the stuff they're bored by but there are things that for some reason some teachers think is super important every student learn but are actually just shit the teacher is emotionally attached to. I know, I work at an after school program. We have no curriculum but most of my fellow counselors are also teachers (or substitute teachers) and they are obsessed with getting ALL of the kids to care about every topic they teach. I get along with them interpersonally, and one is even my friend but they are petty tyrants with the kids IMO and I get into methodological arguments with them here and there.

Most kids have a niche, I say let them focus on it. Not try and force all of them to be jack of all trades unless its bare bones basics of functioning (Reading, writing, math, scientific method/reasoning).

I remember being a kid that loved reading and writing, did great (lots of 100s or at least 90+) at generic vocab/english assignments and the like. But then whenever I had to read a book I did not give a shit about or write an essay about something I had zero interest in it was like I was trying to telepathically push an mountain with a single functioning neuron. I just couldn't do it at all so I'd get zeros on those assignments.

The moment the book seemed cool or the writing topic was fairly open ended I usually did fantastic and even surprised teachers in a few cases. Had it been available to me I 100% would of ChatGPT'd the shit I did not care about but I'd totally do the stuff I was intrinsically interested in anyways without ChatGPT.

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Jankatarch 2 points a year ago

I hated it when teachers would get narcissistic. But in universities it becomes a huge issue. There are computer science majors in my campus that are bored by math and programming so use chatgpt.

They are bored by the degree they chose themselves. So instead of changing degree plan or learning to enjoy it as a hobby like you would normally do, they just cheat.

Professors' workarounds are worse. Universities do not execute any "academic dishonesty" actions because they are the ones giving students free chatgpt account after a deal with openai.

So professors either use AI flaggers that give false positives and give everyone 0, or more commonly just give extremely hard exams to offset homework grade inflation.

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HalfSalesman 1 point a year ago

They are bored by the degree they chose themselves. So instead of changing degree plan or learning to enjoy it as a hobby like you would normally do, they just cheat.

I mean, a lot of people go into a degree because of the promise for jobs even if they aren't into it. Especially computer programming.

I was one, I could have tried getting a Software Design degree but everyone and their brother wanted to be a designer and there was like a tenth of the number of jobs available for such a position. So I went for software programming instead. Which turned out to be its own mistake.

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Randomgal 3 points a year ago

I agree with the general idea of learning through doing. But buddy if your teaching system depends on suffering of the students, maybe them using AI is a symptom and not the problem you need to solve.

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burgerpocalyse 2 points a year ago
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paultimate14 -3 points a year ago

I mean... Fuck AI and all, but hard way = better is definitely not some universal principal we should be applying to education.

The most famous example is all of the people who grew up when calculators were large and expensive pieces of equipment, who were told "you need to memorize your multiplication tables because you won't always have a calculator with you", which sounds absolutely ridiculous to anyone today.

I think it's important for humanity to ask itself: which cognitive processes should we dedicate our fleshy organic brains to, and which cognitive processes are better off outsourced to external technologies? "AI" as a modern buzzword seems to be trying to positively brand these products that are trying (and usually failing) to take on processes that are best left within the brain.

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stingpie 22 points a year ago

Did you really not memorize your multiplication tables? Can you do mental math? For me, knowing multiplication tables is a matter of convenience; it takes a few seconds to pull out a calculator and type in the numbers when I'm perfectly able to do it instantly. Even two by one digit multiplication is faster than pulling out a calculator.

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paultimate14 6 points a year ago

It's important to distinguish between what you memorized as part of a rote process as a child as part of your formal education process versus what you have remember as part of your lifetime of experiences. And if your own personal first exposure to multiplication tables was being made to memorize them, you are probably going to think that's the only way to do it.

For example, most adults would probably the ones they use the most often memorized without any formal education. People use halves, quarters, doubles, and quadruples all the time, so the brain creates shortcuts for those.

Personally my older sister taught me the principles of multiplication and division a couple of years before I encountered them in elementary school. So I had already started to think of it as like... A nested adding function. And also using the algebraic properties (communicative, distributive, associative... I'm probably forgetting some of their names) helped me to understand the numbers and their relationships. So memorizing that 10x means you move the decimal place, but then extrapolating that so that n x 5 = n x 10/2 , which is often easier. Or that n x 9 = (n x 10) - n. So memorizing not the results, but the process.

So when I got to 2nd grade and they started teaching multiplication tables my experience was different from my peers. They would hand out sheets of multiplication problems for the class to do quietly, and at first I was about average: faster than the kids who weren't trying, but slower than the ones who had begun to memorize the table. But I was less prone to the errors that other kids would make: mixing up 6's and 9's or 1's and 7's because they look similar, for example. And I quickly got faster than them, especially when we expanded beyond aingle-digit tables. It also helped me in the process of learning division: when we on from just leaving remainders as an R# to actually writing out decimals or using fractions. My peers would get tripped up trying to divide a number that did not fit nearly into the tables they had memorized. Then they introduced exponents, which a lot of people struggled with but for me was the next logical step to take (although my sister probably showed them to me earlier too).

And even today I totally break out the calculator app or even spreadsheet app on my phone. Not for help with the algebra, but to make a record and make sure that I'm including everything I need to. If I were in the grocery store trying to predict what my end cost will be at checkout, it's much more likely I would get it wrong from missing an item, missing a promotion, or not knowing enough about sales tax eligibility than from any algebraic mistake.

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stingpie 7 points a year ago

You make a good point. I'm interested to know how old you are, because the 'correct' way to teach math has been debated for 70ish years New math was introduced in the 50's, and emphasized the understanding of how base-10 works. This is commonly mistaken for common core math,which put even more emphasis on understanding the procedures used for math rather than the right answer. When I grew up, addition was mainly based in new math, whereas multiplication was introduced as successive addition, but was mostly focused on memorizing tables.

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paultimate14 2 points a year ago

I'm in my 30's. Just barely missed Common Core but I remember hearing parents with younger children complaining about it. I don't remember the math I was taught having any specific branding with it, though it may have been a late variant of New Math.

What I was taught in schools definitely still had a lot of memorization involved. I consider myself lucky that my sister taught me earlier, because I saw a lot of my bright peers struggle with the way it was taught in schools. I never had to study math outside of school for my entire academic career. She helped me to understand computers (she also taught me binary, octal, and hexadecimal systems. Hexadecimal is very useful for a kid with a GameShark and Pokemon).

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PolarKraken 3 points a year ago

I don't mean to be picking fights with you but this is a topic I care about - I really think it's a mistake to say "I was exposed to this material much earlier and therefore picked it up faster and more robustly" and then claim that's an argument against rote memorization. Especially considering how few kids are keeping up in math. Your experience was very fortunate and largely uncommon.

The rules and shortcuts you're describing are absolutely part of the work I'm doing with my daughter, but they go hand-in-hand with the "spaced repetition" (ish) approach we're focusing on, of just iterating a lot. One without the other is much weaker - mnemonics are extremely valuable aids, but none of it sticks without repetition. I'd say that all tasks involving remembering lots of minutiae (contrasted with remembering processes) greatly benefit from mnemonics, but fully require rote memorization practice in order to have the dexterity needed for quick recall that doesn't get in the way. So things like chemistry, anatomy, case law.

It's true that multiplication can be kept strictly a "learn the process" task, but your other points kind of just say that the repetition that comes in a person's life later on finishes that work / replaces the dedicated memorization phase. And frankly the process you went through sounds like it involved a standard amount of repetition, you just had a head start so it didn't feel as new or as uncomfortable.

I say only learning the processes is extremely inefficient and will make learning any more advanced math much, much harder. Lacking that strong basis of recall, kids have to think to do the multiplication that is merely an intermediate step and not at all part of the material being learned, moving forward. This reduces (greatly) their ability to engage with the actual subject matter because they are already working to complete the intermediate steps. I've seen it happen firsthand - I think you mean well, but I think your POV on multiplication is way wrong and actually harmful here.

E: I'm conflating mnemonics with arithmetic shortcuts here, I hope you'll forgive that. They're related - remembering one arithmetic shortcut gives you access to many answers, and usually mnemonics serve a similar "get lots of stuff for one significant remembered thing" kind of role.

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paultimate14 2 points a year ago

Honestly I think you're trying to justify your own approach with your child rather than looking at what should happen.

This has been a trend in US education for decades, maybe a century. The days of the old 1-room schoolhouse with a nun who slapped your knuckles for not memorizing your times tables are long past. Another commenter here pointed out to me that, for math in particular, you can see this trend in the New Math and later Common Core.

My same sister who taught me as a child later got a teaching degree, and one of the key parts of that I remember talking with her about was how the overall trend in the industry was to move away from memorization. Especially because they ran into the common issue where students lose good chunks of what they memorized over summer breaks.

Memorization can be effective, but it can also be a crutch. Those same multiplication tables you memorize as a child you then need to find a way to forget if you ever need to work outside of base-10. The cost of the ease and speed of memorizationks flexibility. Sometimes that's a good trade-off to make, but sometimes it's not.

Beyond that, memorization is just plain bad. Human memory is bad- anyone in criminal justice can arrest to that. As an accountant I can as well. You may think you still have your multiplication tables memorized. Maybe you still do, maybe you don't. Maybe you will on a couple decades, maybe not. Depends on who you are and what you do to maintain that database.

I'm also surprised to see you describe learning the process as "inefficient". To me it seems far more efficient to learn the code or function to do something abstractly and how to apply it than to memorize whole tables of inputs and outputs. I also don't know follow how you think learning processes is harmful to advanced mathmatics either. There are very, very few advanced mathematical problems where memorization could be useful beyond what is taught in high schools. Like... Maybe Turing's Halting Problem in earlier iterations? Kids (or adults) don't have to think to multiply if they just remember the table- that's part of the problem. So I think you're the one with the harmful and outdated point of view here.

Well, memorization does have one good advantage. It's easier to teach. Just hand the student the table and tell them to learn it. Very easy to test and evaluate on.

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bridgeenjoyer -5 points a year ago

Never learned them. Can do basic math in my head except hard division, and can't really do it on paper either. Sucks but has t hurt me one bit in the real world. If it's applied math im fine with it.

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prole 18 points a year ago

but hard way = better is definitely not some universal principal we should be applying to education.

That's not what's happening here though. You don't learn how to craft a well thought out and organized argument by just copy/pasting from ChatGPT. And that is a skill that 100% translates to the real world.

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paultimate14 1 point a year ago

That's why my first and third paragraphs criticized AI specifically.

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shalafi 2 points a year ago

It's lemmy. You're not allowed to so much as ponder whether AI is useful for any task whatsoever.

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PolarKraken 13 points a year ago

I take your point but multiplication is a really bad example. It's one of the few things in life where really doing the rote memorization well, once, pays off lifelong. It can be argued "doesn't pay off lifelong for everyone!", and I mean, strictly speaking that's true.

But not learning multiplication properly is basically a death sentence for keeping up with later math classes, which is exactly what convinces a kid they are "bad at math" and shouldn't pursue entire areas of the working world, generally very rewarding areas, too.

My daughter is not naturally strong at math and I am naturally not authoritarian, but this is one case where being forced to do the work properly one good time (as in learn it truly well, once) is too valuable to let slip.

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shalafi 6 points a year ago

I'd say the ability to do basic arithmetic in your head is a lifelong boon for anyone.

At Lowe's we would load bags of mulch. Guy pulls up with a pickup and an order for 30, "OK, we're going to do 6 stacks of 5." Motherfuckers, customers and coworkers, would fuck it up every time. Need 72 bricks? 9 stacks of 6. Nope! Idiots would count every brick.

When I ran a reprographics shop I found myself embarrassed that I couldn't automatically total a few items, so I practiced until I could. The scion of the local big-time contractor came in and I figured his invoice in my head. He saw me pause for two seconds, "Dude. Why don't you just use a calculator." "Faster to do it in my head." "Yeah, but a calculator doesn't make mistakes." "I don't either. It's only adding a couple of small numbers." He walked away shaking his head at my foolishness.

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PolarKraken 6 points a year ago

Completely agree with you. But hilariously, 9 stacks of 6 bricks only accounts for 54 of them...please don't change it lmao

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shalafi 3 points a year ago

FUCK IT. IT STAYS.

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Genius 3 points a year ago

Need 72 bricks? 9 stacks of 6.

"Yeah, but a calculator doesn't make mistakes." "I don't either

I kind of agree with that guy. I don't trust John Doe to do math in his head when I'm paying the math. I'd rather some guy I don't know use a calculator.

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shalafi 2 points a year ago

We knew each other well. I knew almost every customer that walked in the door.

Second, the mistake will remain.

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QueenHawlSera 10 points a year ago

Telling your robot butler to do your homework for you isn't how you get an education.

I'm all for using tools to make your life easier, but there's nothing educational about describing your assignment to someone else, having them do it, and turning in what they give you....

Using AI is closer to that than the "You won't always have a calculator!1111" example

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paultimate14 -2 points a year ago

Did you not read my 1st and 3rd paragraphs?

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pedroapero -4 points a year ago

sorry for downvote but these large screenshots of black text on white background are just annoying.

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edgemaster72 4 points a year ago

This ... may not be the community for you then, as that's pretty much the whole point.

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racketlauncher831 1 point a year ago

Instead of a screenshot of text, I prefer a link to the original page, or the text copied over here to save me a click.

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k0e3 -16 points a year ago

The first guy didn't "put the work in it" at all. He was just good or lucky.

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paultimate14 13 points a year ago

The teacher probably said "yeah that's a paper, and they are a good student who has already demonstrated their knowledge in class. I don't need to read the whole thing"

In 7th grade I had an essay that I just totally skipped doing. The teacher handed them back to the class with grades and apologized for losing mine, but told me I got a B+.

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manny_stillwagon 7 points a year ago

I had the opposite teacher (also 7th grade), who lost my essay, claimed I didn't do it, and gave me a zero. I still had the doc file, so printed it off again and re-handed it in. But by then it was "past the late turn in date so still worth zero."

Oh, and it was past the late turn in date because she took a month to grade them, so I had no idea she had lost mine until past her arbitrary deadline.

From this experience I learned about covering your ass in communications with authorities, which I don't think was what I was supposed to learn from the essay but it sure worked.

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manny_stillwagon 8 points a year ago

Learning how to write efficiently and having gained a enough knowledge of the subject that you can slap together an essay in 30 minutes on the bus is putting the work in it.

You say they were "just good". Sounds like they had to "git gud" in the first place.

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NotASharkInAManSuit 5 points a year ago

How do people become good at something?

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