procore
#1
Posted 2014-May-23, 14:15
I am an attorney, which involves a ton of reading comprehension. I scored well enough on the LSAT to get into Georgetown University Law. I was a national merit finalist and high school valedictorian.
I have no clue what the hell the answer was to any of the questions. In fact, I could not even reduce the four choices down to three.
-P.J. Painter.
#2
Posted 2014-May-23, 16:16
A very useful principle would be that a normal adult should be able to understand a sixth grade question even if that adult has not attended the sixth grade class. If this is not so, they are teaching jargon, not math, not reading.
I am more than willing to hold off on conclusions until I hear more, but I think that the above principle is a very good starting place.
My grandkids are doing fine as far as I know and I think that their parents are happy, but I hear some complaints from others.
Btw, I did not say parents need to be able to answer all sixth grade questions. I think I can still pretty much recite the Gettysberg Address but I expect there are some questions about, say, the French and Indian War that sixth graders can outscore me on.
#4
Posted 2014-May-24, 21:36
What does the thread title mean? Is that the name of the reading comprehension test? I tried googling it, didn't see much that looked related.
#5
Posted 2014-May-24, 22:10
kenrexford, on 2014-May-23, 14:15, said:
I am an attorney, which involves a ton of reading comprehension. I scored well enough on the LSAT to get into Georgetown University Law. I was a national merit finalist and high school valedictorian.
I have no clue what the hell the answer was to any of the questions. In fact, I could not even reduce the four choices down to three.
fwiw I agree with your first thought.
You may wish to chat with her reading teacher.
As an involved, very involved parent you of all people know what she reads at home and at what level.
To be fair at this point you seem more involved and concerned than most c level parents...ok more than 99% of parents.
#6
Posted 2014-May-25, 05:12
http://pro-core.us/
I could not find any sample questions from them.
I did see something in algebra from a different company (I have misplaced the link) that is addressing Core. I was surprised by how plain vanilla it was. It reminded me of wht I took in 1952 at a run of the mill public high school. You had to know what "terms" meant, and "coefficients", how to solve a quadratic equation, how to find the minimum (or maximum) of a quadratic expression (one variable of course), etc.
I continue to assert my ignorance of the strengths and weaknesses. of Core.
#7
Posted 2014-May-25, 06:16
Which of the following does NOT occur when using a credit card instead of currency?
a. possible service fees
b. accrued interest on unpaid baalnce
c. increased spending limit if overspending occurs
d. less cash carried and an expedited checout process
--
If each picture of a sun represents 10 sunny days, how many sunny days were there this summer?
June (2 suns)
July (1 sun)
August (3 suns)
a. 6 sunny days
b. 20 sunny days
c. 3 sunny days
d. 60 sunny days
--
Which unit is used to meaure the size of an angle?
a. centimeters
b. degrees
c. Celsius
d. angle
--
Which type of angle measures more than 90o, but less than 180o?
a. acute
b. right
c. obtuse
d. straight
--
There are many different processes that shape the surface of the Earth. Mountains are built and lowered by different Earth processes.
Name an Earth process that results in building mountains then explain how this process builds mountains. (2 points)
Name an Earth process that results in mountain lowering then explain how this process lowers mountains. (2 points)
--
None of these struck me as being particularly difficult. Would be interested in seeing some of the questions Ken (Rexford) is referring to. Do you have a direct link to the questions Ken?
As an aside, in general the process of private exams is usually one that promotes easier questions. The reason is that schools want to obtain the highest grades possible for their students to appear higher on ranking tables and therefore tend to choose the easiest exam board. This happened at my school when they changed from Nuffield to AEB specifically for this reason and I saw it happen even more strongly in the years after the introduction of GCSEs (since this was an obvious time for schools to reassess their exam structure).
What I can understand would be a process where initial tests would be designed to be ridicuoously hard and final tests to be significantly easier. This would promote the idea that the provided course was improving the students and also provide encouragement for the students who see their grades improving. Is it possible that this is the real answer Ken?
#8
Posted 2014-May-25, 07:07
On the other hand, c. is attractive. "spending limit" seems incompatible with raising the limit if you overspend, but in the commercial world words seldom mean what they appear to mean so a spending limit that goes up when you want to spend more does not seem impossible to me.
As for expedited check out, it depends. Buying a drink or two and leaving a few bucks on the bar as you leave is pretty expedited.
The main thing for young people to learn about credit cards is that they are the invention of the devil.
Anyway, these questions seem fine to me. I assume they have been told about credit cards. And tectonic shifts.
Zel speaks to a major problem with exams. Often the teachers have a larger interest in having the students do well, or appearing to do well, than the students do. Especially during my adolescence, say age 14-16, I was very casual about how I did. Of course you need to pass, but getting a youngster to much care about more is tough. The teacher's jobs may depend on how a kid does, and the kid doesn't care.
#9
Posted 2014-May-25, 08:32
My son answers the questions according to grammatical structures of the questions, rather than the information in the text (because - not unlike me - he is too lazy to look back into the text): If the question asks for a noun, and the choice options are three verbs and one noun, he picks the noun.
On top of that, when a question was grammatically phrased incorrectly (which is the case for a surprising amount of questions) my son used to simply not answer the question. We needed to explain to him that this intolerance for the shortcomings of others is not in his best interest.
Several times, he was asked for an opinion. This often is obviously not the same opinion as the opinion of the author of the test editor. (I remember a question in a text about the invention of ice cream a few centuries ago. One of the king's cooks who was supposed to keep the recipe secret (telling was punishable by death, which the cook was aware of) sold the recipe and was executed. To the question "What do you think about that?", my son picked the answer: "Fine. He knew that this would happen. He got what he deserved." which was obviously wrong.)
Then there was the text claiming that the reindeer is the largest deer in Europe... Fine for most kids in the Netherlands who have never seen a reindeer. But my kids were born in Sweden. And what do you answer when they ask the question: "Which deer is the largest in Europe?". Naturally, my daughter - who is even more stubborn than I am - wrote down "moose". But this was obviously wrong.
Fortunately, both my kids are pretty good at reading comprehension, so they can afford all this. But the amount of nonsense, logical and grammatical errors that I can find in these reading comprehension tests is astonishing to me. And the teachers don't care. They simply run their stuff on autopilot and don't want to be bothered.
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not Eureka! (I found it!), but Thats funny Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
#10
Posted 2014-May-25, 12:10
The question then had four sentences from the text and asked which of the four lacked evidence or argument in support.
This called into question whether the support was evidentiary or argument, whether the evidence needed to be in the text or in the sentence itself, and whether a judgment of support strength was required. All four sentences seemed to have some textual support, though. None clearly had support. Thus, I couldn't check any off either list.
-P.J. Painter.
#11
Posted 2014-May-25, 12:42
Lawyers, like mathematicians, can sometimes be a pain so of course I don't know to what extent you are fussing here. However I have certainly seen documents, and sometimes in important situations, where I can not at all be confident of the intended meaning.
#12
Posted 2014-May-25, 13:19
kenberg, on 2014-May-25, 07:07, said:
This is the point of the question in my view. The children are taught that overspending with a credit card has consequences and they cannot rely on the card company raising their credit limit if they get into debt. You can therefore tell this is the right answer even if you do not agree with the others.
Incidentally if I had a child that was marked down for saying that the moose (elk) was the largest deer in Europe I would be having a word with the teacher or headmaster. The school should not be teaching misinformation and most likely many of the students went away from that test convinced for life that they knew the answer to this piece of trivia. More than that, the question should come with the proviso "according to the text" to make it clear that this was not a case of general knowledge. Would American schools also use an atheist-leaning text and then ask the question "Does God exist?" There would surely be an outrage!
To Ken, any chance of copying the text and answers here? No disrespect to you but you have a logical process that is often different from the average person (you are the Viktor Korchnoi of BBF ). In my experience, most "difficult" questions of this type can be whittled down from a mix of logic and exam technique. Also, how old is your daughter? Questions for an 18 year old should be difficult! for a 13 year old not so much.
#13
Posted 2014-May-25, 13:23
I looked up stuff about moose, reindeer and such and I found that a reindeer is what we over here call a caribou. I didn't know that! Rudolph the red-nosed caribou... Too late to change the lyrics, I think.
#14
Posted 2014-May-25, 13:34
#15
Posted 2014-May-25, 15:08
#16
Posted 2014-May-25, 18:01
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#17
Posted 2014-May-25, 18:36
It's not hard to see the reason, and it fits in with my view of we do things.
1. People decide that kids need to be taught more stuffearlier, so they beef up kindergarten, including making it a full day (I went from 9 to 12)
2. People say omg, this is too tough for the 4 year olds, we had better insist that they be 5.
3. People say omg, we we have to get these 4 year olds started on learning
4. People start a pre-school program for 4 year olds, making it a gentle program for half a day..
The result, after we go through steps 1,2,3,4, is that 4 year olds go for a half day, 5 year olds go for a full day, just as when I started school in 1943.
#18
Posted 2014-May-25, 21:51
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#19
Posted 2014-May-26, 03:22
Him: You have given the logician's answer rather than the linguist's answer.
Me: So is the lawyer's answer usually the same as the linguist's answer?
Him: Unfortunately, yes, it is.
It sounds like Ken is having a similar experience.
#20
Posted 2014-May-26, 03:30
nigel_k, on 2014-May-26, 03:22, said:
Him: You have given the logician's answer rather than the linguist's answer.
Me: So is the lawyer's answer usually the same as the linguist's answer?
Him: Unfortunately, yes, it is.
It sounds like Ken is having a similar experience.
Linguists* describe how people use language in their day-to-day lives, logicians describe how people ought to think and speak in an ideal world that is nowhere to be found in our galaxy. Why is it unfortunate that lawyers (who work with real people in real life, not robots from outer space) use language as other people do? I agree, though, that sloppy wording is in no one's best interest.
*-descriptive linguists, at any rate.
This reminds me of a math problem we had in high school, something like "We cut a 5x5x5 cube in cubes that have whole numbers as their edge length. What is the minimum number of cubes that we can obtain?" And there was an obnoxious guy somewhere in the front who said, thinking he's very clever, "one!! we cut the cube in one!" and would not sway when we repeated the first two words of the problem many times: we cut the cube. If you leave something intact, it means you do not cut it, and if you cut something, it means you do not not cut it.
This post has been edited by gwnn: 2014-May-26, 03:38
George Carlin