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Kheldarn posted:
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# ? May 7, 2024 07:05 |
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# ? Jun 10, 2024 13:10 |
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hau hau
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# ? May 7, 2024 07:08 |
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Takes No Damage posted:
Please, all these big brane science memes and then a math problem at the end??
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# ? May 7, 2024 07:22 |
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Grundulum posted:Did five-year-old Tree Bucket figure out why they needed an external source of light in order to see stuff? Seems like “darkness” is a bit of a refutation to emission theory, but the Wikipedia page is strangely silent on this. I can't remember that bit, sadly. Just being really certain of it. Same deal with all dogs are boys and all cats are girls.
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# ? May 7, 2024 07:34 |
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# ? May 7, 2024 07:58 |
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TopHatGenius posted:hau hau
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# ? May 7, 2024 08:00 |
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PlatinumJukebox posted:Thanks, it was some kind of 'Top five/ten/whatever creepy things' video with spooky Unsolved Mysteries type music and an English guy narrating in a serious deadpan style. The list items were all ridiculous, but the narrator's delivery was great. I don't remember the details clearly sorry. I don’t think that narrator is actually English. :-D
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# ? May 7, 2024 08:07 |
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Grundulum posted:Did five-year-old Tree Bucket figure out why they needed an external source of light in order to see stuff? Seems like “darkness” is a bit of a refutation to emission theory, but the Wikipedia page is strangely silent on this. Not sure if Empedocles reads this thread but if he does he got owned right now
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# ? May 7, 2024 09:36 |
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Phlegmish posted:Not sure if Empedocles is emitting this thread but if he does he got owned right now
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# ? May 7, 2024 10:55 |
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I've been calling him Empy-Dokles as a savage burn
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# ? May 7, 2024 11:02 |
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# ? May 7, 2024 11:11 |
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# ? May 7, 2024 11:16 |
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I'm happy it was posted, i just read the upside down text without flipping the screen over and didn't get the extra visual punch of the image
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# ? May 7, 2024 11:25 |
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Requesting any and all botany memes, please
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# ? May 7, 2024 14:43 |
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# ? May 7, 2024 14:59 |
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# ? May 7, 2024 15:07 |
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I'm assuming helianthus tuberosus is like a potato that makes sunflowers.
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# ? May 7, 2024 15:10 |
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Hell yeah, keep 'em comingOwlFancier posted:I'm assuming helianthus tuberosus is like a potato that makes sunflowers. Pretty much, yeah. They got tripled chromosomes from hybridization a long-rear end time ago, so their tubers are way bigger and more profuse than the parent species. They also tend to sneak smaller bits a ways away from the main ones under ground so when you harvest (or try to eradicate them) there's usually at least a little clone material left that will grow. I'm growing them along a sun-scorched hellstrip as cheap and easy perennial sunflowers, but they're also a convenient food storage. ChthonicMasturbatr has a new favorite as of 15:35 on May 7, 2024 |
# ? May 7, 2024 15:30 |
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root beer posted:My daughter has reportedly scored in the 93rd percentile on her state math tests for fifth grade this year, but I’m not going to put her through anything that’s going to give her that “gifted kid” mentality because she does not need to end up like my useless rear end. This sounds like you think giving your daughter an opportunity outside the straight and narrow is going to change her personality. Wouldn't it actually put her on a negative path of "never had to work hard" if you keep her out of the advanced math, creative thinking, or whatever other class?
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# ? May 7, 2024 15:47 |
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Yeah, my nephew got in a regional gifted kids class after breezing through most of primary school, and then he learned he was actually one of the slowest kids there and had to work really hard to keep up. I like to think it's better to learn that lesson at age 11-12 than to learn it in college
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# ? May 7, 2024 15:56 |
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They did a straight up IQ test on first graders before admitting them to gifted and talented, and there was a hard floor. I got in by one point so I knew exactly where I was on that particular totem pole.
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# ? May 7, 2024 16:05 |
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gonna get my nose all up in that stamen and give it a good whiff
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# ? May 7, 2024 16:10 |
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zoux posted:They did a straight up IQ test on first graders before admitting them to gifted and talented, and there was a hard floor. I got in by one point so I knew exactly where I was on that particular totem pole. a very scientific and real world quantifiable 1 point of "Intelligence". Science ftw!!! remember the Season 1 episode of Simpsons where Bart erases Martin's name on the quiz so they send him to smart kid school? i havent seen it in a while, I like how it doesnt address the question, why isnt Springfield Elementary sending Martin to smart kid school, where he will be free of Bart?
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# ? May 7, 2024 16:13 |
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I mean it's your kid so you do you but also saying "my kid is smart so I'm going to make sure to not challenge them" seems super backwards. I say that as the classic "never had a gifted program, never was challenged until college where I hit a wall when I actually needed to try" kid.
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# ? May 7, 2024 16:19 |
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wizard2 posted:a very scientific and real world quantifiable 1 point of "Intelligence". Science ftw!!! I don't think that teacher or the students ever appear again. All the gifted stuff is ignored from that point on, probably for the best since it's better to have all the dorks under one roof and with the rest of the students. And while we're on the topic, they also weren't consistent about whether Lisa or Martin is the smartest.
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# ? May 7, 2024 16:30 |
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wizard2 posted:remember the Season 1 episode of Simpsons where Bart erases Martin's name on the quiz so they send him to smart kid school? i havent seen it in a while, I like how it doesnt address the question, why isnt Springfield Elementary sending Martin to smart kid school, where he will be free of Bart? Sending Bart to another school lets the Skinner free of him, but sending Martin there just lowers his school's average grades
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# ? May 7, 2024 16:33 |
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I only had gifted and talented classes until 8th grade, but as an ace test-taker and all-around lazy bum except when interested (wasn't diagnosed with ADD until 40!), the lesson I learned in the G&T classes was that (1) test-taking is the most important skill, (2) being G&T was a sign of superiority even when being wedgied [which I richly deserved], and (3) homework was for suckers, because they sure weren't going to pull me out of G&T classes. Once I got to high school, things changed a little, but I went to a relatively small Catholic high school, where they ran out of math and science to teach me, and with the way the laws worked in Texas at the time I could only take three periods of classes out of seven at high school plus two college courses, which meant I spent a huge amount of my senior year driving around and screwing around instead of studying; further, the college classes were automatically pass/ fail for me, so I put zero effort into them. I had to take two semesters of correspondence classes to make up the "missing" classes, which I never did finish (I was diagnosed with depression by that time), but somehow this slipped through the cracks and I got admitted to college anyway, teaching me the valuable lesson that I can screw up and screw around, and everything's going to turn out all right. It would have helped a lot if my G&T classes had spent less time focused on the wonder of the universe or the spectacle of history and instead taught basic study and organizational skills. I might not have had to cobble those together in college, once I started studying dead languages (about ten years later than most of my peers on average) and things got intense to the point where I was no longer anywhere close to be able to coast through them.
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# ? May 7, 2024 17:30 |
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blacksocks posted:This sounds like you think giving your daughter an opportunity outside the straight and narrow is going to change her personality. Unironically I think it would've unfucked my life if my parents had taken the school's offer of shuffling me up a grade or two in grade school. Instead I breezed through practically all content up through late high school and was woefully unprepared for any kind of effort-requiring education like college or university. Being challenged when I was younger would, I think, have helped me out a lot, or somehow made me even more intolerable.
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# ? May 7, 2024 17:37 |
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Eh most people I know who skipped a grade ended up in a pretty rough place socially. You might have been hosed either way.
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# ? May 7, 2024 17:48 |
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I haven't tried in academia or work in my life and I don't intend to start now. Trying is for things worth doing. Like videogames.
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# ? May 7, 2024 18:00 |
Tree Bucket posted:Listen, fellas, the only non-gay to wash your body is to let the guys handle it. It's just common sense Empedocles nuts
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# ? May 7, 2024 18:16 |
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blacksocks posted:This sounds like you think giving your daughter an opportunity outside the straight and narrow is going to change her personality. it depends whether the gifted and talented program is something that actually challenges them or just Advanced Praise-Receiving
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# ? May 7, 2024 18:50 |
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# ? May 7, 2024 18:55 |
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ok lmao
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# ? May 7, 2024 19:01 |
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OwlFancier posted:I haven't tried in academia or work in my life and I don't intend to start now. Trying is for things worth doing. Like videogames. You can't fail if you don't try.
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# ? May 7, 2024 19:18 |
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Dabir posted:it depends whether the gifted and talented program is something that actually challenges them or just Advanced Praise-Receiving It's this, and it varies state-to-state and even district-to-district. My gifted classes were highly experimental and designed to heap praise on the programs. Because the majority of us were good at rote memorization and test-taking, we were exposed to a lot of material that nobody else was (like a full year devoted to Greek and Roman myth, and another full year dedicated to disasters) where we could take college-level tests right after, pass them, retain nothing, and make the program look good. None of it was challenging because none of it required thought, just simple memorization. We did have free study time, which most of us used for non-scholastic topics (I learned networking! And programming! In middle school!) but that was mostly to show off what we could do, and since it was non standards-based and totally self-guided, again, no challenge. The school board then used our "benchmarks" to ruin education for the general middle school population and tank the county's ratings for several years. They literally redesigned the curriculum based on gifted results and applied it to genpop. I've heard it better now in some places, sometimes.
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# ? May 7, 2024 19:19 |
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I coasted on being smart in grade school and didn't learn studying, then I got owned in high school where I was expected to memorize stuff and do homework. Then I went on to university where I went right back to barely studying and basically just coasting on being smart and attending stuff outside of class. And now I'm in an unrelated job just coasting along and doing great. My point is that I'm loving great I guess? Also very likely autistic. I was never in a gifted programme (we don't really have those in Denmark I think), but I did take 7th-9th in a private school with an entrance exam and pretty serious approach to learning.
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# ? May 7, 2024 19:41 |
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# ? May 7, 2024 19:54 |
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# ? May 7, 2024 19:57 |
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# ? Jun 10, 2024 13:10 |
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# ? May 7, 2024 20:00 |