Although I had majors in English and Philosophy, avoiding math led to a minor in Science, thus 12 of 12. The sugar and cavity one had me pondering, but logic and reason led to the correct, or at least expected answer. I always liked essay better than multiple choice, as there are always answers that are not quite perfectly correct in multiple choice.
So like you, allosaur, I missed a couple....it's been a while since I had a science class. However, I'm glad that so many in the Gulch did so well on the test. But what I really admire about people in the Gulch is not their ability to ace quizzes but their common sense.
Good one. DB is just bragging. The more correct (but far less useful) version of the equation is PV^y = nRT, which accounts for non-ideal properties of gases.
12 of 12, except that they (1) postulated an incorrect predicate when they said "... how the positions of the stars and the planets can affect human life," and (2) they inserted "race" as a category when "race" was not requested in the questions.
this tells me that Pew Research is leftist. -- j .
How much of that stuff did you learn in school? I think I knew most of it simply by being a science nerd. It ran in the family--my mother (a chem major) bought me Tom Lehrer's record with "The Elements" which I immediately transcribed, in order, Sb, As, Al, Se, H, O, N, Re, etc. I was maybe 11 years old.
It doesn't claim to test ability, just knowledge. But I agree with your criticism, since testing knowlege is not as useful an indicator of one's intelligence.
Got all 12, and I suspect most of the Gulchers did very well.
However, I didn't like the sugar or nuclear power/weapons question. The answers were not clearly correct. 1. The sugar one does not provide adequate data for a conclusion. It is simply a correlation, and not a great R value. 2. The nuclear weapons one asks this of the elements is "required" for both. It is quite possible to make both a nuclear weapon and a nuclear reactor without uranium.
Interesting that "Asian" was left off the ethnicity demographic. Suspect we whiteys would be disappointed in our ethnic superiority here.
Got them all as well. I didn't see a challenge here. Just general knowledge if you ask me. But then I was schooled before the Dept of Education came about and I actually learned something.
I have always disliked multiple-guess questions. Occasionally the correct answer is "none of the above" or perhaps "both number 2 and number 4". The cell-phone question has both sound and radio as correct answers, and you have to understand that "sound" is, "Um, yes, correct, but it's not what we wanted you to say."
Multiple guess is popular because it is easy to grade, and easy to defend in disputes about grading.
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Just teasing DB. You probably know this too.
sented myself as a scientist.
high-school grads would miss more than 5. -- j
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when they said "... how the positions of the stars and the planets
can affect human life," and (2) they inserted "race" as a
category when "race" was not requested in the questions.
this tells me that Pew Research is leftist. -- j
.
BTW, "amplitude or height of a sound wave"? A sound wave has no "height", since it's a compressional wave.
However, I didn't like the sugar or nuclear power/weapons question. The answers were not clearly correct.
1. The sugar one does not provide adequate data for a conclusion. It is simply a correlation, and not a great R value.
2. The nuclear weapons one asks this of the elements is "required" for both. It is quite possible to make both a nuclear weapon and a nuclear reactor without uranium.
Interesting that "Asian" was left off the ethnicity demographic. Suspect we whiteys would be disappointed in our ethnic superiority here.
Just general knowledge if you ask me. But then I was schooled before the Dept of Education came about and I actually learned something.
"When in doubt C out"
Multiple guess is popular because it is easy to grade, and easy to defend in disputes about grading.
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