College level is bad too. Cheating, copying, buying on line.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Duping people, ly8ng to people who trust you… dishonorable. Two wrongs don’t make a right.
Unfortunately you just described 90% of high school kids
Anonymous wrote:Duping people, ly8ng to people who trust you… dishonorable. Two wrongs don’t make a right.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The class clown just air dropped answers and he changed his answers before submitting, but send everyone the wrong ones.. HAHA.
This kid is going places
Yep, sabotaging his friends under the guise of helping them. I'm sure he'll be great!
And, I'm not condoning the friends using the answers, I'm just saying it's a jerk move to send wrong answers. I could see my kid (who is only so so at math, tbh) spending a lot of time trying to reconcile his answers with the friend's answers and thinking his must be wrong.
He's teaching them not to cheat, before they are arrested for doing that with their taxes. Sounds like a good guy.
-1
More likely he’s got a career in white collar fraud as the next Madoff or Ponzi
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Airdropped to what? The teachers didn’t notice that many on their phones?
Oh shut up. We can’t take the phones and the parents won’t so what do you want us to do? I had pretty good control all year long by being firm from day 1 but this late in the year it’s impossible to battle the slipping.
Wow, overreaction. I’m a teacher. I don’t take phones either but I certainly don’t let them use them during tests. I would notice if kids were checking their phones while taking a test, take the test immediately and enter a note in the gradebook. Sure, there would have to be a reassessment opportunity but I wouldn’t turn a blind eye to phones out while taking a test.
It wasn’t a test, it was busy work “class work/Formative )
Then why did you even start this thread? It sounds like a nonissue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Airdropped to what? The teachers didn’t notice that many on their phones?
Oh shut up. We can’t take the phones and the parents won’t so what do you want us to do? I had pretty good control all year long by being firm from day 1 but this late in the year it’s impossible to battle the slipping.
Wow, overreaction. I’m a teacher. I don’t take phones either but I certainly don’t let them use them during tests. I would notice if kids were checking their phones while taking a test, take the test immediately and enter a note in the gradebook. Sure, there would have to be a reassessment opportunity but I wouldn’t turn a blind eye to phones out while taking a test.
It wasn’t a test, it was busy work “class work/Formative )
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Airdropped to what? The teachers didn’t notice that many on their phones?
Oh shut up. We can’t take the phones and the parents won’t so what do you want us to do? I had pretty good control all year long by being firm from day 1 but this late in the year it’s impossible to battle the slipping.
Wow, overreaction. I’m a teacher. I don’t take phones either but I certainly don’t let them use them during tests. I would notice if kids were checking their phones while taking a test, take the test immediately and enter a note in the gradebook. Sure, there would have to be a reassessment opportunity but I wouldn’t turn a blind eye to phones out while taking a test.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Airdropped to what? The teachers didn’t notice that many on their phones?
Oh shut up. We can’t take the phones and the parents won’t so what do you want us to do? I had pretty good control all year long by being firm from day 1 but this late in the year it’s impossible to battle the slipping.
Anonymous wrote:Airdropped to what? The teachers didn’t notice that many on their phones?