Spyke
programming.dev

Interesting fact... They make all milk fat free, and then add fat back in to make it 1% 2‰ or whole.

Iys simpler to add in a specific amount of fat than to remove that amount and keep the ratio correct.

47
leminal.space

So for this to be true, the quiz had to have at least 50 questions. That's a terrible number of questions for a quiz.

27
lemmy.world

It could have been one of those "your name is worth 2%" and then the other questions are weighted at 98% total. Those were always fun, I never remembered to write my name at the top.

16
jaybonereply
lemmy.zip

Yeah or maybe like 10 questions and they got partial credit on one of them. Still I agree with parent comment this is bullshit.

19
xorolloreply
leminal.space

Indeed, that's just an extra level of petty during grading at that point.

1
jaybonereply
lemmy.zip

Partial credit on a math problem is petty? I don’t think so. Even if you got the answer wrong, maybe you set it up correctly, then just missed a step somewhere or flipped a sign, or whatever. That seems perfectly reasonable to me.

2
xorolloreply
leminal.space

No, I agree partial credit can be useful in many cases.

Here is why I think it is petty in this case:

  • assume grading is a tool to communicate degree of mastery of some concepts that are tested
  • assume it is better to test concepts frequently, provide feedback early, and move forward based on those results -- then there shouldn't be a scenario where there are TONS of concepts being tested (or at least not for a quiz)
  • if there are only a few concepts being tested, then does 2% really indicate any meaningful distinction of knowledge attained? Or is it as good as 0%? (I suppose the latter)
  • grading takes work. This teacher had to look hard to find something that they felt indicated a few points, but that effort has little benefit to the student -- who would likely benefit more from some remediation efforts than the teacher going through a quiz with a fine tooth comb.
  • the teacher using this quiz to form their next lesson understood the kid needed remediation well before finding +2% partial credit, the kid's grade is effectively the same as 0% and has no return on the teachers time investment to find this +2%, the kids morale is effectively the same as 0%, except worse now because there is an ongoing joke among their peers about the quiz. So all of the time the teacher spent grading this quiz has resulted in a worse outcome than if they just said, "wow this is bad, 0%, let's do tutoring" and moved on.
0

Maybe they maintain a total of all quizzes points, which becomes a portion of your final grade. In which case, you might actually want that 2%.

2

When I was in highschool 5% of math tests was in the presentation of the math, lining up your equal signs, not using × or ÷, putting units where appropriate and stuff like that.

2
brown567reply
sh.itjust.works

1/41 rounded to the nearest percent is also 2%

Or the questions could be worth different amounts

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Kids can be cRule. | Spyke