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#61 |
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No fucks
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Everywhere
Posts: 2,440
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so does that leave me between complete failure and complete success? lol?
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#62 | |
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FFR Player
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I can't determine any of your futures on solely your grades alone.
~Tsugomaru
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#63 |
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Banned
Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 412
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Tsugomaru predict my future
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#64 |
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FFR Player
Join Date: Dec 1969
Location: New York City, New York
Posts: 8,340
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It depends on how you apply the skills, tsugo.
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#65 |
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FFR Veteran
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i almost got a b in adv eng I, the teacher was hard, but cool.
i don't allow myself to get lower than all a's but i dont allow myself to be a complete loser either
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signatures are for nerds nerds |
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#66 | |
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FFR Player
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Your symbol is Ophiuchus. You will end up paying taxes and dying.
Getting As at school doesn't necessarily mean you are applying your skills. I have been through plenty of classes where if you memorized your notes and your textbooks, you can pass the tests because questions come straight out from it. You don't actually need to understand how mathematical formulas work as long as you know how to plug in numbers and get an answer. Even out of school, you aren't going to be successful just because you know how to apply the chemistry you learn at school. ~Tsugomaru
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#67 | |
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FFR Player
Join Date: Jun 2007
Age: 33
Posts: 988
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Quote:
Not only this, but there are teachers who hate smart people, and cause problems to you grade. They don't just go back and change it, but they send you out of class during important lessons, labs, tests, quizzes, notes that aren't in the book, etc. These people can't make all A's. Also, many very potential students don't even try, then make lower grades, or already have a set plan of their future (something like what Bill Gates did when he dropped out of MIT). I think jobs do not revolve around how teachers present information to you, but rather how you elicit the information yourself and how you use it to function properly to your work place (whatever your job is, it will vary). Although, I don't know much about the labor force, I'm pretty sure that doing things the way school (High school) teaches you how to do things, you probably will end up with a mediocre job. I don't know how much of that was nonsense, but I think I got my point across. |
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#68 |
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Just some noobish Vet.
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Someones panties.
Posts: 36
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I always had poor grades and passed by the skin of my teeth.
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#69 |
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caveman pornstar
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High school is all about working the system, which is a very applicable skill for life
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IREnpHco9mw |
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#70 | |
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Supreme Dictator For Life
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In all of high school I got all A's and one B after weighting.
93+ A 85-92 B 77-84 C 70-76 D 69- F AP courses were weighted 10 points, and honors classes were weighted 8. I haven't checked but I guess there were probably a few times I had a B before weighting but only once did I get a B after weighting. I ended high school with a weighted GPA of exactly 100.0% which put me about 25th out of 717. My one B was a quarter of honors chem in 10th grade when my teacher gave me a test after I was out on an orchestra trip for 2 weeks and missed all the material on the test. I still don't think it was fair =/ EDIT: Oh yea college. I finished undergrad at Northwestern with a GPA of 3.2 in both my major and overall. Considering just about every class I took was belled to a 3.0, I'm pretty happy with that. Pretty much every grade I got was a B or a B+. I got a few A-'s and a few C+'s, and a few grades higher or lower but nothing worse than the C- required to get credit for the course. 4.0 A 3.7 A- 3.3 B+ 3.0 B 2.7 B- 2.3 C+ 2.0 C 1.7 C- Anything below that didn't get you credit. Oh and Rubix I got a very humble 1360/1600.
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Back to "Back to Earth" Quote:
Last edited by All_That_Chaz; 11-15-2008 at 10:43 AM.. |
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#71 | ||
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FFR Simfile Author
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Intelligence wise I scored in the top 0.01% at age 14, but it means nothing in terms of GPA. A moderate (r=0.4-0.5) correlation exists between GPA and intellectual capacity, but mostly because learning the material requires some degree of intelligence. Beyond that, it comes down to work ethic and other factors, such as personality. Workaholics and perfectionistic people do better in High School and University, though there is some evidence they do worse on the field and in environments that are less structured. As for my report card, typically As and Bs. I'm at the top of 3 of my classes right now, but around average in two others, which really hurts my GPA =/ As for High School, I had only As, but High School was a joke compared to University. Quote:
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Last edited by Reach; 11-15-2008 at 11:27 AM.. |
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#72 |
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Forum User
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 1,664
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i'm faling 2 gradese rest are A's And B's
I F'ing hate those two classes
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Violets Forever |
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#73 | |
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FFR Player
Join Date: Jun 2007
Age: 33
Posts: 883
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vagina |
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#74 |
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nah
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: nah
Age: 31
Posts: 3,506
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Let's see...
Honors english:95 Honors geometry:84 CP history:95 Spanish 2:88 Honors Physics:90 Not too bad for the first marking period.
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nah |
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#75 |
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Massive flaming dildos.
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In Canada, 50-59= D, 60-69= C, 70-79= B, 80-99= A-A++
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#76 |
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Let em' do what they want
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 3,219
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Course / Teacher / Mark
01PreIBEnglish 11 | Alemian | A 04Active Physics | Collins | A 05Algebra 1 | DiPirro | B+ 06Weight Training | Everett | A 07 Gourmet Foods | Sullivan H | A
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#77 | |
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FFR Player
Join Date: Dec 1969
Location: New York City, New York
Posts: 8,340
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Quote:
What I mean is that you can either get A's in school by memorizing ****, or you can actually try to understand things. You need to be self-sufficient -- the earlier you can start learning material and understanding how to use and apply it without having your hand held, the better. A lot of people who get all A's are workaholic grind-machines, no doubt, but that isn't what I am getting at. Like Reach said, you have a huge chunk of people, by definition, in the middle, and I assure you that this chunk is not homogeneous in nature in terms of how those people performed in high school. Your statistic is horribly overstated, in my opinion. One of the most valuable things that you can learn is how to problem-solve. It's a skill that is more than mere memorization, and is one of the most powerful tools you can try to develop before leaving high school. It's about thinking critically and being able to adapt to situations that may lack structure using a variety of relevant tools. In the real world, things aren't structured like they are in high school. Oftentimes, it's the case of "So, what's the best way for us to achieve this goal or solve this problem?" During interviews for hard job positions in the financial/science/computer/etc sectors, oftentimes the interviewers are trying to see if you can solve problems. They want to know how you think, but they also want to know that you did well in school. In the real world, being able to problem-solve is critical, but it is also important that you're able to handle rigor. If you can't even handle the rigor of school, then it becomes questionable as to how you would handle the difficulties of an environment that may be even more mentally intensive and without structure. Unless your problem-solving abilities are just absolutely over-the-top through the roof, I'd rather hire someone who could problem-solve and had great grades in school over someone who was just able to problem-solve but didn't do that well in school at all. Usually, those with the better grades tend to be better problem-solvers than those with the crappier grades, anyway (speaking empirically here). Last edited by MrRubix; 11-15-2008 at 12:58 PM.. |
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#78 |
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huehuehue
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Ithaca, NY
Age: 33
Posts: 1,211
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Physical Science: 44%/F (The idiot teacher forgot to put a bunch of grades in for everyone, so almost everyone got Fs. A few lucky people got Ds.)
Algebra II Honors: 2.33/C (I missed a couple of tests.) American History: 1.46/D (I missed a test here as well, since I missed a day of school at the worst time.) English III: 1.71/C (I'll admit, I don't do much homework there.) Creative Photography III: 3.32/B (Wait, what?) Italian I: 3.30/B
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#79 | |
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Custom User Title
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 2,105
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Yay for 4.0 in 1st quarter
I certainly wasn't expecting it, cause I had borderline As in AP Chem and World History. =/
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Taking "all" oddjobs! PM me requests. Requests filled: 2 last active Mar. 6th, 2017 ![]() ![]()
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