Posted: Mar 06, 2018 2:03 pm
by Animavore
zulumoose wrote:
they will have no way of knowing what nonsense another teacher was telling the student.


But they will know from the area that this category of nonsense has been approved, and will then have to give the benefit of the doubt, which may mean it would be easier for students to get higher marks by writing bullshit even if they don't believe any of it.


I don't believe they will have to give the student the benefit of the doubt. If you're wrong you're wrong. I can't see how anyone could challenge a grade if the answer goes against what's on the syllabus.

There's so much wrong with the bill it won't possibly be able to stand in any appeals court if passed.