B3TA fixes the world
Moon Monkey says: Turn into Jeremy Clarkson for a moment, and tell us about the things that are so obviously wrong with the world, and how they should be fixed. Extra points for ludicrous over-simplification, blatant mis-representation, and humourous knob-gags.
( , Thu 22 Sep 2011, 12:53)
Moon Monkey says: Turn into Jeremy Clarkson for a moment, and tell us about the things that are so obviously wrong with the world, and how they should be fixed. Extra points for ludicrous over-simplification, blatant mis-representation, and humourous knob-gags.
( , Thu 22 Sep 2011, 12:53)
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That doesn't mean much though
I've just been through an example paper. An awful lot of the stuff in it is mental maths - the sort of thing you would expect to get better at as you get older and have more experience of actually applying percentages and fractions to the real world. For a good comparison, you would want to look at a paper in a subject you haven't used in the intervening time.
( , Fri 23 Sep 2011, 16:38, 1 reply)
I've just been through an example paper. An awful lot of the stuff in it is mental maths - the sort of thing you would expect to get better at as you get older and have more experience of actually applying percentages and fractions to the real world. For a good comparison, you would want to look at a paper in a subject you haven't used in the intervening time.
( , Fri 23 Sep 2011, 16:38, 1 reply)
There
may be some truth in that. I don't recall using maths in that respect, although I had been a programmer for a fair few years at that point, so that alone may have changed the way I think about things and may have had an effect.
Although, I still consider my maths to be shite.
I just don't know.
...that said, the results have increased year on year since 1982. I'm fairly sure people in 1982 weren't as thick as pig shit.
( , Fri 23 Sep 2011, 19:59, closed)
may be some truth in that. I don't recall using maths in that respect, although I had been a programmer for a fair few years at that point, so that alone may have changed the way I think about things and may have had an effect.
Although, I still consider my maths to be shite.
I just don't know.
...that said, the results have increased year on year since 1982. I'm fairly sure people in 1982 weren't as thick as pig shit.
( , Fri 23 Sep 2011, 19:59, closed)
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