55
I Quit Teaching Because of ChatGPT
(time.com)
Human society and cultural news, studies, and other things of that nature. From linguistics to philosophy to religion to anthropology, if it's an academic discipline you can most likely put it here.
Subcommunities on Beehaw:
This community's icon was made by Aaron Schneider, under the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.
That is a very "one size fits all" opinion. I am very gifted in math at a baseline but failed to fully master the fundamentals. And have no ability to memorize a formula I would look up every time in the real world. I only ever cheated by adding the formulas to a program in my graphing calculator.
However, even with these flaws, I graduated high school, having not taken trig, only geometry and algebra. I tested past all pre trig classes by figuring out what sin cos and all are vaguely from context clues.
I then failed hard as you can imagine, and though I fully understood the concepts, I would make small errors in computations. I wouldn't write out everything I did step by step because I was so used to doing things in my head before the teacher was done with the question.
Everyone is different. Signed someone who probably would have made some breakthrough in math with proper mentorship with zero interest in learning math.
I was also never ever taken aside by a teacher who showed any interest at all in my math abilities. Still bitter about it.
Math is one of thoses subjects where you both need muscle memory and full conceptual understanding. Unfortunately there is no skill out there that translates well into giving you that, like geography would to history, english to another language etc. It requires very deliberate practice, which is painful and effortful, so I understand how hard of an obstacle it is for students out there.
Well, it was a generalization after all. The point is that cheating is easy and indeed people do it. Not that nobody ever failed because they weren't given enough of a chance.