Message from @shrikeclaw
Discord ID: 610756555041931272
@shrikeclaw well, IQ actually measures how good are you at abstract problem solving (basically, how good you are at math, geometry or programming ... shit like that),
they were supposed to be guarding the operation as there were major security risks
In our pursuit of egalitarianism, we kneecap the cognitive growth of the gifted, all in pursuit of having a larger percentage that meets some "minimum competence" threshhold.
we had a simple system for scanning things in with a hand held scanner
they broke for about a week, but the guards kept doing the same motion without the scanner
^ cargo cult
Nah. Manipulation.
cover the sticker on the truck with one hand and raise the other up like holding a scanner gun
no point to it
If the kids don't know the scanners are broken, then they're not as likely to bring in guns or knives.
If you stop using the scanners, kids will recognize that something's changed.
dude, the good guys we had were gurkas
the locals were terrible
we had fucking Al-Queida agents inside the damn operation
the locals were useless in that regard
Wait, were they going through the motions WITHOUT a scanner? Even a broken one?
yes
so bizarre
empty hands
I could understand using a fucking broken one, just to maintain appearances, but if there's no scanner then it's obvious as shit that you aren't scanning people.
sorry if I was unclear
If I was working at an inner city school, and the metal detectors were broke, I'd say wand the kids anyways for the few days it takes to get working metal detectors in, just so that not as many of them will know how vulnerable they are.
With any luck, by the time someone realizes they can smuggle in a knife you've fixed the problem.
almost all of the people on my work "level" in africa have major problems learning new software even if straight out of college
some are ok, but most are crap
I had the great honor of tutoring a graduate student from Uganda.
She was taking college algebra, and couldn't do basic arithmetic. Even basic addition, with two digit numbers, was too much for her.
The level she was at, she shouldn't have been able to pass third grade, let alone high school, and especially not college.
there is an enormous discrepancy
that says more about the education system in Uganda than anything else
no, that's an international graduate student from Uganda, accepted to the first world
@tereško - I think we should give people a chance to prove themselves, and then judge accordingly. We should be splitting kids up by ability starting around second or third grade, and there should be more splits as you progress in education, because a lot of kids are going to be at vastly different levels and it would be deeply unfair to them to have them all in the same class.
another level
Yeah, international student. Graduate level. Accepted into the United States.
Couldn't do basic fucking addition.
might help
basic mineral ID is what I have trouble with
Quite frankly, anyone looking to immigrate into the United States should take a "skills test." If they cannot read, write, and do math at a fifth grade level, then they cannot come here. We should impose that test retroactively on any immigrants too, and deport anyone that can't pass.
@Arthur Grayborn ideally we should have classrooms of 6-12 kids. But to get that, we probably need huge advancements in AI, to get virtual teachers.
basic fucking mineral identification from first year college
they can't do the simplest stuff
@tereško - Small classrooms only make a difference for low performing students.
The research found that results were negligible for white students - they learned just as well in a large lecture hall as they did in a smaller hands-on class.