An Ah-Ha Moment

Tuesday, 21 April 2009 15:38
dr_phil_physics: (upsidedown-winslet)
[personal profile] dr_phil_physics
It's Quiet -- It's Too Quiet

Actually, it's about right. In the midpoint of the middle of my three Final Exams. Will be a lot more crowded in here tomorrow. A lot of the Noon section of PHYS-2070 has bailed on this exam time because of a transportation conflict between the main campus and the engineering campus -- no way can you get from one to the other in the allotted fifteen minutes between finals. I can't remember now, did Northwestern have an hour between final time slots and Michigan Tech half-an-hour? Either would be more civilized.

How To Use A Calculator

So far no calculators have clattered to the floor, which during an exam always prompts Dr. Phil to announce "gravity works". But, sitting here and taking a break from typing -- and switching from my office glasses to regular so I can see the students -- I noticed something.

My high school Advanced Chemistry class was the first class in the city of Greensboro NC that was allowed to have calculators. It took most of the year, but we nearly all bought the same model, a Texas Instruments SR-51A. I'd seen an HP-65 at UNC-G once, never dreaming that at Northwestern I'd own one -- once the price came crashing down in February 1977 when the HP-67 came out. (grin)

But nearly everyone I knew used a single index finger to push the calculator buttons.

These Kids These Days

About half of the engineers in this class seem to be holding the calculator upright, not flat on the desk, and working their thumbs. Dammit, Jim, they're texting, not calculating!

Huh. I suppose, now that they know how to do that...

Dr. Phil

Date: Tuesday, 21 April 2009 21:34 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dr-phil-physics.livejournal.com
Cabri looks like software for figures. Preloaded or downloaded in some models of those icky TI Graphing calculators. Of zero use for calculation of Dr. Phil's Physics problems, which is why I am t*h*i*s close to outlawing graphic calculators in my classes and making them buy simple scientific calculators, because they'd make fewer mistakes that way. (grin)

Dr. Phil

Date: Tuesday, 21 April 2009 21:37 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] j-cheney.livejournal.com
Sorry Dr. Phil....but whatever the calculator spits out is the correct answer. It's a calculator--all knowing and all powerful.

Date: Wednesday, 22 April 2009 01:48 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dr-phil-physics.livejournal.com
Next you're going to tell me that just 'cause it's on the Internet, it must be true.

Dr. Phil

Date: Wednesday, 22 April 2009 02:06 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] j-cheney.livejournal.com
Of course ;o)

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