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Should my friend got the mark?


Bronium

1,163 views

  

3 users have voted

  1. 1. Should he have got the mark?

    • Yes
      3
    • No
      0

There was a question and it went along like this:

 

From the graph:

 

a)i) Pick the top speed:

ii) When it happened:

iii) The position at the time:

 

And the answer that I got (and so did the teacher) was 8.5ms-1. The answer from the graph.

But the thing was, that the graph was from a table of values (given to you) and from those values the top speed could be worked out to be (distance and time was given) 11.5ms-1.

 

Now, a person wrote 11.5. Which was technically wrong. I mean, it did ask from the graph. Yet, it bugs me because if you think about it, he had the more correct answer as the graph was well, wrong.

 

I won't get into the details because it requires the table of values and I don't have the test paper with me. But technically, the graph was drawn wrong (or inaccurately) and without the phrase from the graph, my friend would've been right.

 

If my friend had drawn a graph, he would've drawn a more accurate version and then he'd be right.

 

Now, I think he would've gotten the mark. See, he was technically more right than the question. I mean, take it like if you were asked to you g = 10ms-2 and you used 9.81ms-2. I mean, your answers were more accurate than what was being required, but because of the constraints of the question, you're wrong.

 

And this mind you, pretty much makes the rest of the question impossible to get correct and he lost 8 marks in total. Which in the end he got around 60 percent. Now, these tests aren't important, next year they will be and vitally so. And I don't want to fucked out of a grade.

 

Either way, you know what I would have done. What about you?

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It depends on the type of test it was. If it was just a little in class test, then the teacher really should accept correct answers if they can be shown to be correct, regardless of what the answer key says.

On the flip side, it did explicitly say "from the graph", but that's really a technicality, I think. If this was an official, standardized test or something similar, then he should've gotten it wrong because, well, it was wrong.

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I would give him partial credit, but that is really something you should know to look for in math. If he also went through the rest of that question right with that number I would give him near full credit for every question afterwards.

 

But room to judge each individual on a case by case basis doesn't really exist in this society so I can't really say on whether or not he should have got any credit at all. There's no room for failure in this age, even for something so small as a test

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