I think I see where the confusion is.

the student is technically correct

BUT

the teacher was expecting a literal reading of the equation

Three times Four

the student gave Four times Three

Is this silly? Yes

the student is answering a math problem, but the test is asking a language question
Follow

@GaryPaulWood
More importantly, this is the exact case, where you can see a student being punished fur understanding the principle of equasion and the comutative property.

This cannot possibly lead to anything else, but students learning to ignore the logic and focus 100% on the expected steps.

@LukeAlmighty @GaryPaulWood it's punishing the slightest hint of independent problem solving, and grinding it out of them.
@themilkman @LukeAlmighty

this is true

both of you are correct

but ask yourselves if the intent of the question was made clear in the first place

You can't answer a question as intended if the intention isn't made unambiguous

@GaryPaulWood @themilkman
The intent of the question was clear, and the kid passed.

The teacher, on the other hand, should get a different job. Might I recommend a servitor duty?

Sign in to participate in the conversation
Game Liberty Mastodon

Mainly gaming/nerd instance for people who value free speech. Everyone is welcome.