Donate SIGN UP

philosophy exam myth?

Avatar Image
mollykins | 11:02 Wed 25th Aug 2010 | Jobs & Education
15 Answers
Hearing about something on one of my other threads reminded me of this story, which is probably a myth.

An a-level student was in a philosophy (I think it's philosophy but it might be something like sociology or psycology) exam and one of the questions was 'what is bravery?' And they wrote 'this is . . . ' and didn't write anything else, and got an A for it.

Surely that's a myth?
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 15 of 15rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by mollykins. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
The other tale is: exam question: what is a question? star student answers: if that is a question, then this is an answer.
All sounds a bit dodgy to me. Don't believe everything you hear.
Nobody would get any sort of mark (apart from a bad one) for writing that.
Question Author
exactly, they'd want an answer that included stuff like; fear, selflessness, heroism, and debated which was the msot important aspect and yarda yarda yarda.
There's another one of these where the question was "Why?" and the 'A' answer was "Why not?" think these must be myths!
Not so long ago a student (I think GCSE) just wrote "f**k off" on his paper and got a pass grade for expressing himself, and for correct spelling.
!!!!!!!!!
Lucca, I can absolutely and totally assure you that this story is made up. Pupils, especially immature teenagers, sometimes write abuse on their answer papers. Examiners have strict guidance as to how to deal with this. It does not in any way include accrediting it as contributing positively to their grade.
On our RE GCSE paper there was a question about how did the disciples recognise Jesus after he rose again or something like that) my friend put "He had an 'I am Jesus' badge and a heavenly glow around his head" Not sure of his grade though!
This one has always appealed to me.

http://www.pinetree.n...r/thermodynamics.html
Scotman that is a belter.
Question Author
And there's the classic, 'find x' and they circle it and say 'there it is.'
Question Author
I got a book full of silly answers from exam papers.
A lecturer once told me that a colleague of his (it's always a friend of a friend, isn't it?) was so traumatised during an exam that he stood up and walked out muttering, "I'm an orange, I'm an orange!".
Question Author
Crikey.
My favourite one is the philosophy exam that started with a professor marching in, placing a chair in the middle of the hall, and announcing that the exam had one part - the students must prove the existence of the chair.
Story goes that the A went to the one student who simply wrote "What chair?"
-- answer removed --

1 to 15 of 15rss feed

Do you know the answer?

philosophy exam myth?

Answer Question >>

Related Questions

Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.