Frazz by Jef Mallett for April 11, 2013

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    KenTheCoffinDweller  over 11 years ago

    Yes, for the lack of. No effort no decent grade.

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    Randy B Premium Member over 11 years ago

    Parts of Michigan use “E” after “D”. It’s also a standard part of the European grading system.

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    Yochanan204  over 11 years ago

    In Texas, E is for “incomplete,” like her ambition.

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    Varnes  over 11 years ago

    I C how it is…..

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    vwdualnomand  over 11 years ago

    isn’t that the new normal? kids still living with their parents. because, the economy is struggling. student loan debt up to the eyeballs. and, there are some places that are too costly to live.

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    jessegooddoggy  over 11 years ago

    What happened to F for failure? Must be politically incorrect.

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    WillardMBaker  over 11 years ago

    No one fails anymore. Too hard on the poor kid’s feelings. And we’ve extended that hogwash to Corporate America. Too big to fail indeed.

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    neatslob Premium Member over 11 years ago

    We used to get "E"s when I was in grade school. Well, I mean they gave them out. If I had ever actually gotten one I would have been in big trouble at home! In junior high they swapped the "E"s for "F"s.

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    T_Lexi  over 11 years ago

    In my grade school, it was E = outstanding, H = above average, G = average, L = below average, and U = unsatisfactory.

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    Potrzebie  over 11 years ago

    I think there’s a paradox here, since she is smart enough to realize the future, she will be able to avoid it.

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    ncalifgirl58  over 11 years ago

    Our kindergarten kids get descriptive grades. Upper grades get 1, 2, 3, or 4’s.

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    Sportymonk  over 11 years ago

    My son graduated from UNC in 2010 and is still living at home working at a grocery store part time. His best friend graduated UNC in Communications 2010 and worked part time at a gas station and then a grocery store. Also worked PT for a doctor editing surgical videos but only $10/Hr 12hr a week. Student debt t forced him to do more so he joined the Navy but they would take him as an officer so he went in as an E-1. Another friend was a 2010 UNC Teaching Fellow (free four years of college if they teach four years in the next seven). Seems even Teaching fellows are having a hard time. He is not teaching yet. County govt. not hiring many. Wife just graduated with a PhD and has few opportunities open currently. Time magazine had an article that said 54% of recent graduates do not have a job so am proud my son is working.

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    Zaristerex  over 11 years ago

    My school in Canada used “E” in lieu of “F”. Anyways, my best friend is 30 and still lives with his parents. It’s not due to laziness: he has a bachelor’s degree, and has been looking for a job for 6 years. He can never find anything permanent. He does substitute teach and edits books freelance, but it’s an intermittent income, not enough to live on his own. There are many other people out there with similar stories.

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    Ihranune  over 11 years ago

    In what decade did it stop being E for Excellence?

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    gordol  over 11 years ago

    Some places have been using ‘E’ for a failing grade for at least 30 years. It’s not a politically correct change, it’s a logical change. The passing grades are A through D, and the next letter in the alphabet is not ‘F’, it’s ‘E’.

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    annieb1012  over 11 years ago

    The high school my daughter graduated from used neither E nor F. D was failing. If a student earned a C, he or she passed the course. A D meant summer school, and two or more Ds resulted in mandatory repeat of that grade.

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