Slumgullion Spitteler, on Jul 6 2009, 10:14 AM, said:
Thelomen Toblerone, on Jul 5 2009, 02:13 PM, said:
@Slum - the scale thing is completely different. You CANNOT get 100% here. One of my hosuemates got a first and did so well he was offered the chance to skip his masters and get accepted straight away for the PHD. He certainly didnt get above 80%, yet he would wipe the floor with most american linguistics students who got over 80%, because the ranking system is different.
I know it's probably a shit uni or whatever, but in "Tommy Lee Goes to College", he was learning stuff in Chemistry I did at GSCE or lower A level, which I found very amusing. He's thick as shit so unsurprising, but that sort of stuff would simply not be on offer at a UK uni. The range and method of teaching is so different, and accordingly the expectations and system of marking is different. You lot learn a broad range, we specialise on just one or two subjects. For instance, in 3 years I did not one class that was not a politics or philosophy module.
For me, ours makes more sense. To suggest a 2nd year physics student could actually have an entirely complete and perfect understanding of black holes or whatever seems a ludicrous proposition to me, but in theory in the US they could get 100% which would suggest that. Here, even the best Politics professor would never get 100%, and they know exactly what the markers are looking for and know the subject in detail.
Meh, it's all relative, I imagine. I personally enjoy getting 'A's. Same thing as you getting an 80, I guess. I really don't think you lot are smarter than us. Different systems, different marks.
It's not like, if you got a 100% an exam, you're suddenly an expert on the subject. It just means you studied, knew the material, and answered everything right.
Exactly! Under the US/Canada system your grading, as a percentage, is reflective of how well you know the material taught in the course, not the subject as a whole. If you get 100% on a first-year physics astronomy course, part of which's material was black holes, that means you know all the info you learned in the course, but of course its a general introductory course and not supposed to teach you everything about that.
Likewise, if you finish your Bachelor of Science, come back and do a Master's in Black Holes and get 100% in those courses too (bloody difficult), then you probably do know almost everything about them. Finish it off with a Ph.D in Black Holes, but those aren't really graded on the same strict percentage-like system...
Furthermore, it's not like there is only one course for every topic, so the Tommy Jones analogy is severely invalid. Colleges across NA offer topics at a lot of different levels. Seeing as Mr. Jones is some sort of media celebrity, I very much doubt he took Chemistry in high school. Thus he is probably taking the chemistry designed for arts students who stopped taking sciences in the last 3 years of high school, and thus his course is just material from that, 2 or 3 levels below the first-year undergraduate chemistry classes taken by those actually in the Bachelor of Science program...
Complexity, thy name is college!