Coming Soon đ At the beginning of April, youâll be
introduced to a brand-new GoComics! See more information here. Subscribers, check your
email for more details.
I did that on part of an exam too when I ran into some Math word problems I couldnât answer. I think the test was one of those ones that was graded on a curve because I remember being shocked when I got a 80 something on it. I always figured they did that so the teacher wouldnât look bad by flunking us all, because the material was impossibly difficult. I know some of you are teachers so can you tell me if Iâm right on that assumption?
Speak for yourself. I enjoyed both immensely. Still do.
Of course, having Calvin act like that (until he creates a good clone of himself, which will happen eventually) would violate the First Law of Cartoon Physics: âOnly When Itâs Funny.â :))
Dino-1:
⊠so the teacher wouldnât look bad by flunking us all, because the material was impossibly difficult. I know some of you are teachers so can you tell me if Iâm right on that assumption?
Dino:
as a teacher, I would like to share with you that:
YES - there is this curve thing . ND normal distribution.
However, this is what school board makes us follow, not that individual teachers care. There are places that would lower the passing mark so there would be similar percentages of grades for different subjects. However, the way we do it is to give out grades, rather than marks when we do apply the ND for grading.
Praxsis - You mean Gore-Bull Warming? Thatâs why the Enviro-terrorists have now changed it to âClimate Changeâ. Used to be âGreenhouse Gasesâ. Always new phrase hysteria so they can still keep the lie âhipâ.
Sorry Calvin but you will receive a failing grade. âI donât knowâ is not correct.
This reminds me of the story about the professor who wrote one word on the board âWhy?â and left the room. Everyone was trying to figure it out but one person wrote on their paper, âWhy not?â and left. They got an A.
As I try to figure out the connection between todayâs strip and the pot shot comments about scientists and global warming, I am left only with Calvinâs answer, âI donât know.â
My daughter was taught a little in middle school but not in hight school allergra bra. When she started for Associates it took a special teacher to break it down for everyone at the time told the instructor they where frustrated and no one could teach them allergrabra. I told my daughter some teachers/instructors may not know how to break it down since for long time it has been taught a certain pacific way. My daughter creditâs that instructor and recommended her to other students for that class. For adults this instructor cared.
I remember my grandma finding a paper that my uncle had written in high-school many years ago.
âWe were given an assignment to write about something special that had happened to us. I have 3 days to do this.
Well just got done with supper and I canât think of anything yet. Iâll try later.
Need to get to bed and I still havenât thought of anything to write about.â
You all get the point right? This went on for the 3 days. He had turned this paper in and actually gotten a C on it for his creativity, format and speclling!
Love that look on Câs face as heâs jumping off the porchâŠI doubt thereâs a comic strip out there that catches any better what itâs like being a kid better than C & H!
Once in college I was called upon to give what the instructor called a prepared talk. I had forgotten about this assignment , so I proceded to give an improvised lecture on how to lecture on any subject when you were completely unprepared.
DD FENCE EMET, not all religious leaders, and (especially) scientists are afraid or reluctant to answer, âI donât know.â I willingly use the phrase, because I donât know everything. A scientist I know likes to say, âGee, I donât know. Letâs find outâŠâ
And so does every religious leader worthy of the name, if the situation calls for it. Thatâs one big reason why I work as a consultant in Bible background and exegesis.
I may not know something, but I certainly have confidence that I can find out anythingâŠwhen the Lord agrees that I really need to. That trust has never been betrayed.
Why arenât either of the witless lumps helping him understand his school work? Itâs not like they are completely unfamiliar with him or his methods at this point. Poor little Calvin, always fending for himself with such lousy, self removed parents.
âFor I do not seek to understand that I may believe, but I believe in order to understand. For this I believe that unless I believe, I should not understand.â
St. Anselm of Canterbury
There is âblind faithâ, and there is credible faith. Blind faith might have no real basis; credible faith is based on facts and reason.
Calvin has blind faith that his answers will be acceptable, but they are not really answers. They are an admission that he doesnât know the answers.
I taught at an ivy league university for a number of years. The reason wild curves and grade inflation exist is a philosophy that giving bad grades hurts students self-esteem, independent of whether they deserve bad grades.
The problem with this, is that it may be reasonable in kindergarten or first grade or second grade, but it has to stop somewhere. This philosophy already dominates the thinking at most 4-year universities. So, students graduate with an âAâ or âBâ average and discover they have no skills and no job.
It is time for the parents and students demand a âCâ weighted curve at all schools, so grades mean something. If all the schools change at once, it will be a level playing field. No one wants their school to go back to âCâ being average when the other schools have âA-â as average.
Susan, teachers have little control of how much homework to give. In fact, there are specific time guides for each grade level - check out the student handbook teachers have to send home the first week of school. Classrooms have stopped being child-centered, and there is very little room for a teacher to go with their strengths in teaching. School boards are told by state boards of education, who are told by the Federal government that so much progress must be made in test scores, and that is how things are run these days. Please donât blame teachers.
In my math class, you got a point just for attempting each problem, even if you got it wrong. In most situations in life, you can actually learn more from being wrong than being right.
margueritem about 15 years ago
Youâd betterâŠ..
Flintstoned about 15 years ago
Well, you let him go.
imaginarypet about 15 years ago
I have to try this on my exams today.
sjoujke about 15 years ago
I did that on an exam onceâŠ.they were not amused.
kreole about 15 years ago
Heâll make a good scientist. I love it!
Bargrove about 15 years ago
More research is needed
vinaybhatta about 15 years ago
At least he was honestâŠ
Yukoner about 15 years ago
Write numbers at random, tell Mum itâs ânew mathâ.
Dino-1 about 15 years ago
I did that on part of an exam too when I ran into some Math word problems I couldnât answer. I think the test was one of those ones that was graded on a curve because I remember being shocked when I got a 80 something on it. I always figured they did that so the teacher wouldnât look bad by flunking us all, because the material was impossibly difficult. I know some of you are teachers so can you tell me if Iâm right on that assumption?
Rakkav about 15 years ago
Not meaning to be a wet blanket, but why would this make Calvin a good scientist?
ARF2 about 15 years ago
The problem is that a true answer is not necessarily a correct or acceptable one.
rentier about 15 years ago
Playing outside with Hobbes is much more funny than learning!
Rakkav about 15 years ago
Speak for yourself. I enjoyed both immensely. Still do.
Of course, having Calvin act like that (until he creates a good clone of himself, which will happen eventually) would violate the First Law of Cartoon Physics: âOnly When Itâs Funny.â :))
carmy about 15 years ago
Oh boy, wonât mom and dad be surprised?
jrbj about 15 years ago
âThese are similar to the ones we had the other day â, doesnât work either.
pintcape about 15 years ago
to late his already gone,you wonât catch him now.
Praxsis about 15 years ago
I can see Calvin, working with AL GORE on the Climate Change ThingyâŠGLOBAL WARMINGâŠ.
Ivy0730Lcsq about 15 years ago
3+7= ïŒ 37
jbmetalmonster about 15 years ago
hey they always say tell the truth rite? whats the piont, they nevr even believe the truth even if u do speak it
pamlicorat about 15 years ago
As a teacher, I can tell you that this is what a lot of kids do on their homework. Then they ask for extra credit two days before report cards go out.
lewisbower about 15 years ago
Do I see Susie as a tutor?
friarwilliam about 15 years ago
Dino-1: ⊠so the teacher wouldnât look bad by flunking us all, because the material was impossibly difficult. I know some of you are teachers so can you tell me if Iâm right on that assumption?
Dino: as a teacher, I would like to share with you that: YES - there is this curve thing . ND normal distribution. However, this is what school board makes us follow, not that individual teachers care. There are places that would lower the passing mark so there would be similar percentages of grades for different subjects. However, the way we do it is to give out grades, rather than marks when we do apply the ND for grading.
GROG Premium Member about 15 years ago
Ivey0730 I like your math much better. That would make the answer to Calvinâs question 57.
ââââââ If I didnât know something, I either left it blank or faked it.
Bob. about 15 years ago
I puuled that once on a chem engineering quiz..
Quest: Can you âŠâŠâŠâŠ.
Ans: No
I got credit for it.
Trainwreck_1 about 15 years ago
Calvin⊠A glairing example of why âNo Kid Left Behindâ has put such a financial burden on school districts!
bald about 15 years ago
if i had used calvinâs logic when i was in school, maybe i would have had better grades
treBsdrawkcaB about 15 years ago
Praxsis - You mean Gore-Bull Warming? Thatâs why the Enviro-terrorists have now changed it to âClimate Changeâ. Used to be âGreenhouse Gasesâ. Always new phrase hysteria so they can still keep the lie âhipâ.
alondra about 15 years ago
Sorry Calvin but you will receive a failing grade. âI donât knowâ is not correct.
This reminds me of the story about the professor who wrote one word on the board âWhy?â and left the room. Everyone was trying to figure it out but one person wrote on their paper, âWhy not?â and left. They got an A.
witewater about 15 years ago
As I try to figure out the connection between todayâs strip and the pot shot comments about scientists and global warming, I am left only with Calvinâs answer, âI donât know.â
kab2rb about 15 years ago
My daughter was taught a little in middle school but not in hight school allergra bra. When she started for Associates it took a special teacher to break it down for everyone at the time told the instructor they where frustrated and no one could teach them allergrabra. I told my daughter some teachers/instructors may not know how to break it down since for long time it has been taught a certain pacific way. My daughter creditâs that instructor and recommended her to other students for that class. For adults this instructor cared.
LiamC Premium Member about 15 years ago
Last day to enter the Cul de Sac Christmas Sweater Contest! Grand prize winner gets The Complete Calvin and Hobbes!
Go to blogs.gocomics.com and send in your pic today!
daphygirl about 15 years ago
how i wish that worked Calvin, i could do almost nothing and still get 100% it would be awesome.
dudeabideshou about 15 years ago
Kind of surprising that Calvin (heâs what, 8 or 9 years old?) still canât figure that the sum of 5 + 7 is 12.
Ldywldkat about 15 years ago
I remember my grandma finding a paper that my uncle had written in high-school many years ago.
âWe were given an assignment to write about something special that had happened to us. I have 3 days to do this.
Well just got done with supper and I canât think of anything yet. Iâll try later.
Need to get to bed and I still havenât thought of anything to write about.â
You all get the point right? This went on for the 3 days. He had turned this paper in and actually gotten a C on it for his creativity, format and speclling!
I would never have gotten by with that.
Dirty Dragon about 15 years ago
Cliff Clavin: âWho are three people who have never been in my kitchenâ
AJCA about 15 years ago
Mon said âFinish the homeworkâ, she never said it had to be correct.
Shikamoo Premium Member about 15 years ago
Calvin has just lowered the bar for child prodigies. Hop over everyone!
bleepingdeadalien about 15 years ago
Love that look on Câs face as heâs jumping off the porchâŠI doubt thereâs a comic strip out there that catches any better what itâs like being a kid better than C & H!
Gretchen's Mom about 15 years ago
Yukoner: With an answer like âI donât knowâ, Iâd say the math is more âfuzzyâ!
dudeabideshou: I think Calvin is only 6 years old.
aerwalt about 15 years ago
Once in college I was called upon to give what the instructor called a prepared talk. I had forgotten about this assignment , so I proceded to give an improvised lecture on how to lecture on any subject when you were completely unprepared.
I passed the course, a âBâ .
Awesome-o about 15 years ago
GENIUS answerâŠ
masood4ever about 15 years ago
5+7=12 crazy
bmonk about 15 years ago
DD FENCE EMET, not all religious leaders, and (especially) scientists are afraid or reluctant to answer, âI donât know.â I willingly use the phrase, because I donât know everything. A scientist I know likes to say, âGee, I donât know. Letâs find outâŠâ
Rakkav about 15 years ago
And so does every religious leader worthy of the name, if the situation calls for it. Thatâs one big reason why I work as a consultant in Bible background and exegesis.
I may not know something, but I certainly have confidence that I can find out anythingâŠwhen the Lord agrees that I really need to. That trust has never been betrayed.
medamo about 15 years ago
Iâm surprised he stayed inside THAT long!
mrslukeskywalker about 15 years ago
Why arenât either of the witless lumps helping him understand his school work? Itâs not like they are completely unfamiliar with him or his methods at this point. Poor little Calvin, always fending for himself with such lousy, self removed parents.
Rakkav about 15 years ago
Because if they helped him, that would violate the First Law of Cartoon Physics: âOnly When Itâs Funnyâ.
celeconecca about 15 years ago
@JohananR
âI donât know/understand, but I acceptâ = faith?
Puddleglum2 about 15 years ago
âFor I do not seek to understand that I may believe, but I believe in order to understand. For this I believe that unless I believe, I should not understand.â St. Anselm of Canterbury There is âblind faithâ, and there is credible faith. Blind faith might have no real basis; credible faith is based on facts and reason. Calvin has blind faith that his answers will be acceptable, but they are not really answers. They are an admission that he doesnât know the answers.
celeconecca about 15 years ago
@Johanan R You mention you are a consultant in Bible background and exegesis.
This is something my husband would really like to do. Any specific areas he should look at to do this type of consulting work?
The missing M. Smokey about 15 years ago
I get $5.07
soneca about 15 years ago
In response to Dino-1:
I taught at an ivy league university for a number of years. The reason wild curves and grade inflation exist is a philosophy that giving bad grades hurts students self-esteem, independent of whether they deserve bad grades.
The problem with this, is that it may be reasonable in kindergarten or first grade or second grade, but it has to stop somewhere. This philosophy already dominates the thinking at most 4-year universities. So, students graduate with an âAâ or âBâ average and discover they have no skills and no job.
It is time for the parents and students demand a âCâ weighted curve at all schools, so grades mean something. If all the schools change at once, it will be a level playing field. No one wants their school to go back to âCâ being average when the other schools have âA-â as average.
Sorry for the rant, back to the funnies.
ratlum about 15 years ago
answer 26 better than I dont know duh
lfanterickson about 15 years ago
Susan, teachers have little control of how much homework to give. In fact, there are specific time guides for each grade level - check out the student handbook teachers have to send home the first week of school. Classrooms have stopped being child-centered, and there is very little room for a teacher to go with their strengths in teaching. School boards are told by state boards of education, who are told by the Federal government that so much progress must be made in test scores, and that is how things are run these days. Please donât blame teachers.
rlb918 about 15 years ago
âI can see Calvin, working with AL GORE on the Climate Change ThingyâŠGLOBAL WARMINGâŠ.â
Yeah, leave it to the Internet for someone to try to politicize even a CARTOON to try to further their own political agenda. (Rolls Eyes)
Nivellios about 15 years ago
ah too trueâŠ
Captain_Commando about 15 years ago
dudeabideshou, Calvin is only 6 (although his vocabulary would make you think that heâs older)
stewdeo3bs about 15 years ago
To show his work, he should have drawn a picture of himself scratching his head.
DerkinsVanPelt218 about 14 years ago
In my math class, you got a point just for attempting each problem, even if you got it wrong. In most situations in life, you can actually learn more from being wrong than being right.