Anonymous wrote:No, but if she starts a Wordle Club at her school and appoints herself President, and incorporates a non-profit to teach Wordle to underprivileged youth, it will look great on her college resume in six years (if they still ask for that stuff by then).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She has a future at NSA. That kind of game, along with other word puzzles or chess, is an indicator for the kind of mindset needed to analyze messages. Read up on how Bletchley Park recruited puzzlers during WW2. (No, I am not kidding.)
Crosswords are an order of magnitude harder than wordle, lol.
Anonymous wrote:No, but if she starts a Wordle Club at her school and appoints herself President, and incorporates a non-profit to teach Wordle to underprivileged youth, it will look great on her college resume in six years (if they still ask for that stuff by then).
Anonymous wrote:Keep doing puzzles like that and keep reading. Logic and flexible thinking will serve her well no matter where she ends up.
DH bombed the Logic Reasoning section on the LSAT. I (not a lawyerly type) was curious so I did that section on a practice exam and killed it, quickly and easily. People have different strengths.