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-   -   1912 8th grade School Exam most people will flunk in 2013: (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=1117968)

Grapesoda 08-10-2013 07:41 AM

1912 8th grade School Exam most people will flunk in 2013:
 
http://www.bullittcountyhistory.com/...exam1912sm.jpg













the answers

seeandsee 08-10-2013 08:20 AM

fucking test like its space science :)

Mutt 08-10-2013 08:21 AM

neat - i'd pass that exam, probably would score 65%, the spelling, reading and arithmetic i'd ace, the history, geography, physiology i'd be lucky to get 50% - the kids who took that test studied that stuff all year though and prepared for the exam.

where are you getting this old stuff?

Ferus 08-10-2013 08:29 AM

Paper looks like its printed on a laser printer, rather than being 100 old. Corners are to sharp to be pressed.

Grapesoda 08-10-2013 08:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mutt (Post 19754131)
neat - i'd pass that exam, probably would score 65%, the spelling, reading and arithmetic i'd ace, the history, geography, physiology i'd be lucky to get 50% - the kids who took that test studied that stuff all year though and prepared for the exam.

where are you getting this old stuff?

a buddy of mine post this stuff on facebook

Grapesoda 08-10-2013 08:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ferus (Post 19754142)
Paper looks like its printed on a laser printer, rather than being 100 old. Corners are to sharp to be pressed.

yep doubt very much it was CROPPED or anything stupid like that :2 cents:

The Sultan Of Smut 08-10-2013 10:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ferus (Post 19754142)
Paper looks like its printed on a laser printer, rather than being 100 old. Corners are to sharp to be pressed.

http://i.imgur.com/y6C19T7.jpg

DWB 08-10-2013 11:05 AM

I would TOTALLY fail that.

Maqua 08-10-2013 11:34 AM

:thumbsup

L-Pink 08-10-2013 11:38 AM

I browsed an old book comprised of letters home from the front lines during the Civil War. It was amazing how intelligent and well spoken the average young man was at that time.

adultchatpay 08-10-2013 11:41 AM

the Kentucky way!

:)

L-Pink 08-10-2013 11:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by adultchatpay (Post 19754263)
the Kentucky way!

:)

I can guarantee you not one current Eastern Kentucky resident would bet their EBT card balance they could score a 75% or better.

.

timlover 08-10-2013 02:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mutt (Post 19754131)
neat - i'd pass that exam, probably would score 65%, the spelling, reading and arithmetic i'd ace, the history, geography, physiology i'd be lucky to get 50% - the kids who took that test studied that stuff all year though and prepared for the exam.

where are you getting this old stuff?

Where the hell did you go to school where 65% was passing?

Anyways, given what you said, you would have scored a 450/600

which is 75%, but since you got that wrong, I'm deducting 10%

so you're stuck back at 65%

Mutt 08-10-2013 02:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by timlover (Post 19754387)
Where the hell did you go to school where 65% was passing?

so long ago but 65% was equivalent to a 'C' or 'C+'

80%-100% was 'A'
70%-80% was 'B'
60%-70% was 'C'
50%-60% was 'D'

I got low 50's in Calculus and still passed.

AsianDivaGirlsWebDude 08-10-2013 03:39 PM

http://originalhoopla.files.wordpres...ot-picture.jpg

Quote:

This item, purportedly a final examination for graduating eighth grade students is of interest because it's supposed to be documentary evidence of how shockingly our educations have declined over the last century or so.

Why, most "adults" couldn't muster a passing score on this test today, people think; that mere schoolkids were expected to pass it is proof that the typical school curriculum has been steeply "dumbed down" over the years.

The object of this exercise was only to reveal that the dumbing down of American public education over the past 100 years has been substantial, particularly in the last 50 years.

What nearly all these pundits fail to grasp is "I can't answer these questions" is not the same thing as "These questions demonstrate that students in earlier days were better educated than today's students."

Just about any test looks difficult to those who haven't recently been steeped in the material it covers. If a 40-year-old can't score as well on a geography test as a high school student who just spent several weeks memorizing the names of all the rivers in South America in preparation for an exam, that doesn't mean the 40-year-old's education was woefully deficient; it means the he simply didn't retain information for which he had no use, no matter how thoroughly it was drilled into his brain through rote memory some twenty-odd years earlier.

I suspect I'd fail a lot of the tests I took back in high school if I had to re-take them today without reviewing the material beforehand. I certainly wouldn't be able to pass any arithmetic test that required me to be familiar with such arcane measurements as "rods" and "bushels," but I can still calculate areas and volumes just fine, thank you.

Ah, but this is eighth grade stuff, people say; it's basic knowledge that everyone should remember and use. Nonsense. The questions on this exam don't reflect only items of "basic knowledge"; many of the questions require the test-taker to have absorbed some very specialized information, and if today's students can't regurgitate all the same facts as their 1912 counterparts, it's because the types of knowledge we consider to be important have changed a great deal in the last century, not necessarily because today's students have sub-standard educations.

Consider: To pass this test, no knowledge of the arts is necessary (not even a nodding familiarity with a few of the greatest works of English literature), no demonstration of mathematical learning other than plain arithmetic is required (forget algebra, geometry, or trigonometry), nothing beyond a familiarity with the highlights of American history is needed (never mind the fundamentals of world history, as this exam scarcely acknowledges that any country other than the USA even exists), no questions about the history, structure, or function of the United States government are asked (not even the standard "Name the three branches of our federal government"), science is given a pass except for a few questions about geography and the rudiments of human anatomy, and no competence in any foreign language (living or dead) is necessary.

An exam for today's high school graduates that omitted even one of these subjects would be loudly condemned by parents and educators alike, subjects about which the students of 1912 needed know nothing at all.

Would it be fair to say that the average 1912 student was woefully undereducated because he failed to learn many of the things that we consider important today, but which were of little importance in his time and place?

If not, then why do people keep asserting that the reverse is true? Why do journalists continue to base their gleeful articles about how much more was expected of the students of yesteryear on flawed assumptions? Perhaps some people are too intent upon making a point to bother considering the proper questions.
:stoned

ADG

Marcus Aurelius 08-10-2013 03:57 PM

The answer to many of those questions is, "who gives a fuck?" who needs to know that shit?


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