...in the coolest way possible.You look like you’re about to save Luke from the sand people.
--Patrick
...in the coolest way possible.You look like you’re about to save Luke from the sand people.
Damn. Glad you are ok!Saturday afternoon I came down with some of the worst abdominal pain I've ever felt.
I have just now finally fully come out of anaesthesia, having had my gallbladder removed
Pre pandemic, if we were going over $200 it was because we were refilling things like detergent or TP. This is definitely more a commentary on how much prices have gone up in three years than a receipt measuring contest.Food for two weeks for two people for (rounded) $350 is $12.5 pppd. If that includes lunches and breakfast that's downright cheap.
I know what you mean and all but... Our grocery bills are way higher than that. As in... €250/week if it's a week we're both mostly eating in (wife often eats at work).
Were they going to the moon?WELP, some idiot tried to buy a thousand dollar bus ticket with my credit info. Reported the fraud so it's no big, but still annoying.
Either that or around the world in eighty days. Said ticket was from a website to, not even a print ticket, total amateur.Were they going to the moon?
My friend's wife is a grade 5 teacher and she literally told me yesterday most of her class is at a sub-grade 2 level. The pandemic really fucked up kids and school. She mentioned attendance is ass-trash now too. Most students barely make it in 80% of the time.I'm grading my students' papers right now, and I've observed that plagiarism has gotten much worse since the pandemic. Furthermore, the students are completely shameless about it. When I catch them they brush it off with, "I was in a rush and copied something down. That counts, right?" Or they'll ask to redo it. They were in high school when everything moved online and they grew accustomed to overworked and stressed teachers letting everything slide. It's like they are several years behind in terms of maturity, which is exactly what pandemic era schooling has done to students from elementary to college.
My syllabus is quite clear that the first count of plagiarism results in a zero on the assignment. A second count results in an automatic failure in the class. Nobody has ever gotten caught plagiarizing twice in my classes, but I seriously think it might happen this semester. This is a minor rant because I actually enjoy shredding a cheater's grade point average. Failing students who tried their best is my least favorite part of the job. But failing cheaters? That's a genuine pleasure.
I don't default to assuming cheating any more, though I used to adopt such a hard line stance. Between the pandemic giving students a piss-poor education compared to previous standards and writing assignments that are utterly banal, students haven't really been challenged to write an actual paper more than once when they come into my class. They don't understand the iterative process involved, don't understand the intent of the assignment, view it as busy work, etc. I shouldn't have to teach them all of this, but if I feel like a writing assignment is important in my class, then it is what I need to do. So I either make the space to teach them the process of writing a paper or I don't include a paper. I also make sure my writing assignments are novel and interesting (when I can make them interesting) and that my rubric pushes the students to perfect their papers over time with a high standard that plagiarized content will utterly fail on (due to the terrible way that scientists habitually write and the novelty of the assignment.) By the time I am done with them, they aren't even quoting prior work.I'm grading my students' papers right now, and I've observed that plagiarism has gotten much worse since the pandemic. Furthermore, the students are completely shameless about it. When I catch them they brush it off with, "I was in a rush and copied something down. That counts, right?" Or they'll ask to redo it. They were in high school when everything moved online and they grew accustomed to overworked and stressed teachers letting everything slide. It's like they are several years behind in terms of maturity, which is exactly what pandemic era schooling has done to students from elementary to college.
My syllabus is quite clear that the first count of plagiarism results in a zero on the assignment. A second count results in an automatic failure in the class. Nobody has ever gotten caught plagiarizing twice in my classes, but I seriously think it might happen this semester. This is a minor rant because I actually enjoy shredding a cheater's grade point average. Failing students who tried their best is my least favorite part of the job. But failing cheaters? That's a genuine pleasure.
To be fair, I always felt like "papers" were just busy work, especially ones that came with an assigned minimum page limit. But then my writing style has always been to agonize over choosing and arranging the specific words that will maximize information/communication density.They don't understand the iterative process involved, don't understand the intent of the assignment, view it as busy work, etc.
Three-quarters of high school seniors can't write. I mean, they can read but they don't know how to form a proper paper. Most of my freshmen also hate to read anything longer than a Yelp review. I blame smart phones and shitty parenting.I don't default to assuming cheating any more, though I used to adopt such a hard line stance. Between the pandemic giving students a piss-poor education compared to previous standards and writing assignments that are utterly banal, students haven't really been challenged to write an actual paper more than once when they come into my class. They don't understand the iterative process involved, don't understand the intent of the assignment, view it as busy work, etc.
I learned how to write in college, and I really learned how to write in grad school.
I would hope that most teachers would see this as a teaching moment rather than a "I'm gonna enjoy destroying their gpa and maybe even lose their scholarship" moment, particularly when dealing with low level college right out of highschool. If we're talking a PhD program then sure.This is a minor rant because I actually enjoy shredding a cheater's grade point average.
Especially when acknowledging that covid's impacts are likely a fairly sizable factor in why they ended up where they are as far as expectations and skillsets go.I would hope that most teachers would see this as a teaching moment rather than a "I'm gonna enjoy destroying their gpa and maybe even lose their scholarship" moment, particularly when dealing with low level college right out of highschool. If we're talking a PhD program then sure.
I always give them a chance to explain themselves. If it turns out they just didn’t cite their source, then it is indeed a teachable moment and we go over what citations are. Then I adjust their grade because it was an honest mistake. And on the other end of the spectrum you have the students who turn in 99% plagiarized papers that were bought from some sketchy website. Honestly, I would rather read a nearly incomprehensible scrawl of a paper so long as it’s genuine.I would hope that most teachers would see this as a teaching moment rather than a "I'm gonna enjoy destroying their gpa and maybe even lose their scholarship" moment, particularly when dealing with low level college right out of highschool. If we're talking a PhD program then sure.
My friend's wife is a grade 5 teacher and she literally told me yesterday most of her class is at a sub-grade 2 level. The pandemic really fucked up kids and school. She mentioned attendance is ass-trash now too. Most students barely make it in 80% of the time.
Yes but the trans people are just so...distracting.this country is the worst place in the developed world to raise a family.
Fair, and at least I got a story out of it.I'm sorry, that sucks and I sympathize, but it's also funny for an outsider who isn't confronted with being late for work and stressed out etc over it.
You're delivering to Grimace.Am I delivering to god damn ghost?!
Nothing can kill the Grimace, we're done here.You're delivering to Grimace.
--Patrick