Frazz by Jef Mallett for May 14, 2024

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    Bilan  about 1 month ago

    You learn from when you try to fool Mrs Olsen.

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    Cactus-Pete  about 1 month ago

    And yet another bad assumption. Pretty sure no one has proven that we learn from our mistakes – and I’ve seen plenty of evidence that says the opposite.

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    David Wright Premium Member about 1 month ago

    The idea is that you make your mistakes in worksheets and homework, the grades show you what those mistakes are, so you learn from them and don’t make them in the test.

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    rheddmobile  about 1 month ago

    He has a point. You’re not supposed to make any mistakes in the American school system. You’re supposed to pay attention in class to the point that you do everything perfectly the first time, every time, or pay a price that lasts until you get into college.

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    Shirl Summ Premium Member about 1 month ago

    No, no you are not Caulfield.

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    Slowly, he turned...  about 1 month ago

    Just remember, If you dont make msstakes, you dont get dinged!

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    Ceeg22 Premium Member about 1 month ago

    If he really cared about grades he would do the work

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    sandpiper  about 1 month ago

    Quiz grades were an indicator of future performance. Consistently low grades from students who appeared mentally average generally indicated lack of interest and/or study, regardless of the subject. Given enough quizzes with similar results, one probably could predict their final numeric averages within about 3 points.

    However, with students like Caulfield, that went out the window. Kid with his mental abilities could tool along, making mediocre grades and showing little interest, then hit a near perfect score on the finals. That would boot his gpa for the year into the top bracket and also leave a very frustrated teacher [and probably parents], who had recognized his talents, and who had tried every strategy under the sun for him to get better grades along the way.

    So, in all, those students were a joy to teach, but very wearing on the rest of us.

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    rshive  about 1 month ago

    Think that Caulfield is trying to steer the discussion in another direction.

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    DM2860  about 1 month ago

    Because if there are no consequences in making mistakes, then people will not learn to stop making them.

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    DaBump Premium Member about 1 month ago

    It’s the dinging that lets you know you made a mistake, and remember it.

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    DarkHorseSki  about 1 month ago

    Getting dinged for your mistakes is what incentivizes a person to learn from them.

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    markkahler52  about 1 month ago

    Just fail to make mistakes, is all….

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    timbob2313 Premium Member about 1 month ago

    Kids got a point

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    Lambutts  about 1 month ago

    So, are homework, quizzes and tests to show how SMART we are? Or how dubm? (misspell intentional)

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    DKHenderson  about 1 month ago

    If a kid makes consistent mistakes, as revealed in tests, quizes, etc, a smart teacher (and Mrs. Olsen is certainly that!) will know what needs to be worked on.

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    Ancient Wise Guy  about 1 month ago

    I’ve never made a mistake. Of course, there was that one time as a teenager I said, “Nobody’s perfect.”

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    tammyspeakslife Premium Member about 1 month ago

    His point is valid. Not everyone learns the same way, the current methods are not working for everyone, things need to change. If you don’t agree do some research in favour of my claims instead of dismissing it outright. As an autistic who grew up in a neural typical world, expected to toe the line.

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    Ontman  about 1 month ago

    To smart and snarky for his own good

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    Stephen Gilberg  about 1 month ago

    You don’t learn from mistakes. You learn from consequences.

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    meowlin  about 1 month ago

    We learn from our mistakes.

    We get dinged for making them so we know they’re mistakes.

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    unfair.de  about 1 month ago

    Grading homework and worksheets? If that’s true that is indeed stupid and off the point of such labor.

    If those are graded it should be by completeness and effort, not content. Their grade of correctness should help the teacher understand what a student is in need of help.

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    frogman0628  about 1 month ago

    While he isn’t particularly wrong the weight of those mistakes decreases as his list continues. Homework contributes a lot less to the final grade than say a major test or final. Making any mistake isn’t consequence free else sadly.

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