Here’s an early one from 1986 that was rerun a couple of years ago, during the reruns of the reruns from Bill Watterson’s first sabbatical. The rerun of his second sabbatical begins next April, so we will be reading reruns of reruns next year from April through December. Then in 2015 we go through the final year of Calvin and Hobbes, from 1995.Click here: Calvin and Hobbes (June 19, 1986)
I took that course in university, not grade school. I’m sure all the executives of the fortune 500 and goverment have, too. It doesn’t seemed to have done much to guide their behaviour in business and government.
I doubt ethics is taught in most public scholls at any level. Too much emphasis on standardized testing tied to funding, which, in turn, gets tied to teacher/administrator bonuses. Would be nice if kids could get taught life skills, critical thinking, and ethics first. One of my favorite movie qutes is from Peggy Sue Got Married, when the 42-year old Peggy Sue time travels back to high scholl and tells her math teacher, " I happen to know that in the future I will never have any use for algebra!”
I figured it out by the 3rd grade – when you cheat, you are only cheating yourself. of course I was very bored in school, teachers taught to the test, all you had to do was pay attention in class the first time it was taught – don’t worry, teacher will go over and over it if you miss it.
I can envision a situation where the test itself is a load of PC huey. A highly competent engineer might decide to cheat on the PC test for a government job, get the job, do excellent work, then in a few years, his cheating is discovered and he is fired. But, the remaining civil engineers, who got straight As in political correctness, couldn’t design a safe bridge to save their life. The fired engineer tries to warn people that the new bridge design is unstable, but no one listens because he is a cheater. Finally, the story ends as the bridge collapses with tragic loss of life, and the engineer (who knew better that to be any where near it) watches the dust and smoke from a distance and ponders the consequences of his choice.
While I agree with your opinion of the worth of Omnius’ posts, I disagree strongly with your solution. “flagging” a comment is a form of censorship, and should be reserved for comments containing language that is inapproprate in a public forum, not simply ones we disagree with. We claim to support freedom of speech; rather than flagging his/her comments, simply allow the inane ranting to remain and ignore it. Commenting on the comments simply feeds the weeds and makes them grow, and flagging denies him/her the right to prove his/her intelligence level.
I work as a teacher. I had a principal who had no principles. No kidding. I had to quit before I was fired. I had principles. Weird. My students emailed me for 4 years after asking for my help in all classes, and I obliged; it drove the principal nuts.
He should have written his thoughts on the paper. For an elementary student taking ethics, these kind of machinations might have honestly earned him something.
ratlum about 11 years ago
It does seem wrong dosent it.
kittenpah about 11 years ago
I had this one posted in my office for a long time. I do have to point out that not acting is also a decision, in this case in favor of not cheating.
ratlum about 11 years ago
You really left the problem unsolved Calvin.
johnt204 about 11 years ago
Anyone want to go to a doctor who cheated through med school?
BE THIS GUY about 11 years ago
They should most this one in locker rooms.
rentier about 11 years ago
Not cheat on an Ethic test.
ziphobia about 11 years ago
Moral of the story boys and girls is when locked into an ethical debate let time save the day.
watmiwori about 11 years ago
…or get elected to public office, which is what most seem to settle for.
Jogger2 about 11 years ago
A kid that age is given an ethics test?
Phapada about 11 years ago
like every where cheat on test….
unnormal about 11 years ago
“. . . what he told Hobbs . . . . "
Precisely my thought, too.But, by the time he had it figured out, he wouldn’t have had time to write it down.-Such is life.
micromite about 11 years ago
Calvin is a born genius with that analysis…
Hobbes Premium Member about 11 years ago
Calvin’s ethics test turned out to be a test of his ethics.
Hobbes Premium Member about 11 years ago
Here’s an early one from 1986 that was rerun a couple of years ago, during the reruns of the reruns from Bill Watterson’s first sabbatical. The rerun of his second sabbatical begins next April, so we will be reading reruns of reruns next year from April through December. Then in 2015 we go through the final year of Calvin and Hobbes, from 1995.Click here: Calvin and Hobbes (June 19, 1986)
Hobbes Premium Member about 11 years ago
Click here: Dilbert (May 30, 1995)
Hobbes Premium Member about 11 years ago
Click here: Pearls Before Swine (December 17, 2010)Click here: Wizard of Id (October 8, 2008)Click here: Ziggy (February 28, 2002)Click here: Peanuts (May 23, 1962)
vwdualnomand about 11 years ago
we all cheat. weight, money, love, appearances, test scores, games, etc… we even cover up the cheating.
GROG Premium Member about 11 years ago
I took that course in university, not grade school. I’m sure all the executives of the fortune 500 and goverment have, too. It doesn’t seemed to have done much to guide their behaviour in business and government.
katzenbooks45 about 11 years ago
I doubt ethics is taught in most public scholls at any level. Too much emphasis on standardized testing tied to funding, which, in turn, gets tied to teacher/administrator bonuses. Would be nice if kids could get taught life skills, critical thinking, and ethics first. One of my favorite movie qutes is from Peggy Sue Got Married, when the 42-year old Peggy Sue time travels back to high scholl and tells her math teacher, " I happen to know that in the future I will never have any use for algebra!”
ajnotales about 11 years ago
I’m printing this out for my wife to post on her classroom door: among other college courses, she teaches business ethics!
gyroman12345 about 11 years ago
hmm
Casperdevill about 11 years ago
Well done Calvin. I give you 65% on your Ethics test. If you had doodled your thoughts on your paper I would have given you a distinction.
morningglory73 Premium Member about 11 years ago
Calvin; a born diplomat.
Commentator about 11 years ago
You’re a good kid, Calvin.
BRO6164 about 11 years ago
Today starts the After of the Before & After. Don’t ask.
katina.cooper about 11 years ago
If he had spent as much time studying for the test as he did debating whether to cheat or not, he would have aced the test.
Poollady about 11 years ago
Calvin, if you would spend as much time studying as you do contemplating, maybe you would do better…………………..on the other hand…………………………..
marshalljpeters Premium Member about 11 years ago
I see Omnius is back trolling again.
I Quit about 11 years ago
Wait. What? He’s giving a sophisticated discourse on ethics and yet he turns in a blank paper on an ethics test?
billdi Premium Member about 11 years ago
once again proving that this strip was one of the all time greats and in a class by itself.
rgcviper about 11 years ago
One thoughtful fellow, that Calvin.
route66paul about 11 years ago
I figured it out by the 3rd grade – when you cheat, you are only cheating yourself. of course I was very bored in school, teachers taught to the test, all you had to do was pay attention in class the first time it was taught – don’t worry, teacher will go over and over it if you miss it.
Number Three about 11 years ago
Cheating is OK… As long as you never get caught!
LOL xxx
stuart about 11 years ago
I can envision a situation where the test itself is a load of PC huey. A highly competent engineer might decide to cheat on the PC test for a government job, get the job, do excellent work, then in a few years, his cheating is discovered and he is fired. But, the remaining civil engineers, who got straight As in political correctness, couldn’t design a safe bridge to save their life. The fired engineer tries to warn people that the new bridge design is unstable, but no one listens because he is a cheater. Finally, the story ends as the bridge collapses with tragic loss of life, and the engineer (who knew better that to be any where near it) watches the dust and smoke from a distance and ponders the consequences of his choice.
Stephen Gilberg about 11 years ago
Who starts a sentence with “anymore”?
rentier about 11 years ago
I have seen pictures from Colorado today, horrible! Poor people!
ratlum about 11 years ago
Is it a he or a she?
NachoCheese Premium Member about 11 years ago
But if it was blank, he still failed lol
Shiny Quagsire about 11 years ago
So if he didn’t cheat even if it would have gotten a better score, did he then (in a way) pass a test of ethics?
Fuzzy Thinker Premium Member about 11 years ago
Think of how much costs have gone up because of security expenses. We must protect ourselves from dishonesty and criminal behavior.
bluskies about 11 years ago
bluskies said, less than a minute ago
@bhinkle
While I agree with your opinion of the worth of Omnius’ posts, I disagree strongly with your solution. “flagging” a comment is a form of censorship, and should be reserved for comments containing language that is inapproprate in a public forum, not simply ones we disagree with. We claim to support freedom of speech; rather than flagging his/her comments, simply allow the inane ranting to remain and ignore it. Commenting on the comments simply feeds the weeds and makes them grow, and flagging denies him/her the right to prove his/her intelligence level.
susan.e.a.c about 11 years ago
I work as a teacher. I had a principal who had no principles. No kidding. I had to quit before I was fired. I had principles. Weird. My students emailed me for 4 years after asking for my help in all classes, and I obliged; it drove the principal nuts.
einarbt about 11 years ago
I think Calvin should pass his ethics subject.
lindz.coop Premium Member about 11 years ago
Ethics test in the first grade? Doesn’t that consist of forming a straight line to go to the bathroom and not “taking cuts?”
jim_pem about 11 years ago
He should have written his thoughts on the paper. For an elementary student taking ethics, these kind of machinations might have honestly earned him something.
lizilu about 11 years ago
Ha-ha! Great punch line! Now lighten up, it’s a comic strip.
bmonk about 11 years ago
I agree: write down your quandry. At least you are doing ethics and being honest. Were I the teacher, I’d offer some credit for that.
2Tori about 11 years ago
Cheat to win or just study. What are the other choices? peeks Ok, Cheat to win.
AaronJOyster over 4 years ago
LOL. How do you study for an ethics test? That sounds like trying to study for a blood test.