As you can well imagine,
scholastic pursuits are never too far from our dinner conversation. With two children valiantly attempting to
conquer a second language, we continually pour over dictionaries and school
books in an effort to help them deal with the dismal truth that they are stuck
with immigrant parents. Until a certain
age, all children believe that mom and dad know “everything” and trying not to
burst their bubble with our ignorance is a full time job. Our eldest’s intellect is frightening, and
trying to keep up with the cornucopia of philosophical questions coming out of
that kid’s mouth is beginning to give me heartburn. It is hard to accept sometimes that he is but
9 years of age. His personality grows by
the day and his ability to call bullshit on an answer is truthfully
painful. Now, I am generally an absolute
font of completely useless information and am able to hold my own with the best
of them in a solid game of Trivial Pursuit.
I also pride myself on thinking quickly on my feet, so I am seldom
stumbled by one of his brain teasers.
The wife however, was the unlucky recipient of one of his recent
queries. He wanted to know why the
grading scale in school is A, B, C, D and F.
What about “E”? The wife admitted
defeat and advised him that she wasn’t sure.
She later asked me the question and I of course didn’t miss a beat. F is a Freaking Failure. D is Deplorable, C is Crappy, B is Better and
A is Amazing. So why not E? It's simple, E isn’t used because of a lack of available negative adjectives
to describe scholastic imperfection. The
only one I could come up with was Excrament.
Telling little Johnny that his school work is Shit seems a bit worse
than a simple failure. Now, I would of
course never give my eldest this half-assed explanation as he would
instantaneously see right through the charade.
It is a brilliant question, however,
and unfortunately the best answer
I could find seems ambiguous at best. It
would appear that some educational systems do in fact use the “E” standard for
a conditional failure. Some would seem to
argue that the “F” is used only as a throw back to an antiquated pass/fail
system, leaving “E” out in the cold. I
myself have always hated the term “failure” as it isn’t appropriate in all
scholastic contexts. My most recent
scholastic endeavor, now years in the past, being my triumphant passage of the Bar Examination is a grand example of what I am
talking about. Graded on a pass/fail, it
is a terrible blow to one’s self confidence to be called a failure when you
fell just a point or two short of success.
The truth is, you don’t FAIL, you just don’t pass. Beating your psyche
to a pulp over such an arbitrary label is ridiculous. And so, I believe it is time to rise up
against the establishment and shake off the traditional grading system for
something that is a little less ethereal.
Easy as ABC and 123
I believe we should get back
to the county fair for an appropriate answer to this dilemma. An “A” as we now know it should be listed as
“First Prize”. A “B” would then be
called the “Runner Up”. The average “C”
rating could be a nice “Honorable Mention”.
A woeful “D” would get the “Participation” award. And finally, “F” . . . a bit tougher, but
perhaps a “Disqualified” would do nicely.
Ok, maybe this isn’t workable afterall.
It all sort of stinks of the softening of our culture that plays out in
youth athletics these days. Not
everybody should get a ribbon or a trophy.
You know what second place is?
FIRST LOSER. That right, lets
quit sugar coating the world and get down to it. There was an old saying in law school that
“A” students became teachers, “B” students became judges, and “C” students
became rich. Perhaps not a lesson for
the “real” world, but maybe there is something here we can hang our hats
upon. Maybe we can attach professions to
the letters to give them some weight and provide some reasonable expectations
for those receiving said marks. How
about “A” for Anesthesiologist or
Aerospace Engineer; “B” Bartender or
Bellhop ; “C”
Cosmetologist or Cab Driver ; “D” for Dancer (of the Exotic Variety) or Drug Dealer;
and “F” for Fry cook. No, that isn’t
going to work either I am afraid. True,
the generous skew toward the top would certainly make many strive for top
marks, but stereotyping strippers is unfair and I for one appreciate their hard
work and dedication. So, where does that
leave us? Drop the ABCs entirely and go
for the truth. E, A, S, D, I: Exceptional, Average, Simpleton, Dullard,
Idiot. If you have a preference for dumbing
it down and rating a “C” student as “Average” then we can modify this to E, C,
A, D, I: Exceptional, Competent,
Average, Dullard and Idiot. If anyone
has any better ideas, I would be glad to hear them. For now I guess we will continue on with the
meaningless A,B,C s of achievement and skillfully dodge those questions from
future generations with a swift “because” and leave it at that. But dad, why is the sky blue? “Because” son, now shut up and eat your
vegetables. That is all I have for today
and God willing this will get the wife off of my back since my lack of recent
activity has not gone unnoticed. Pray
for me. R.
3 comments:
How about a four-level system: 1,(best effort and achievement); 2, (achievement, but inadequate effort); 3 (best effort, but inadequate achievement); and, 4 (inadequate effort and inadequate achievement).
Actually, the designations should be 1, 3/4, 1/2 and 1/4.
E=Errorist:
Someone who repeatedly makes mistakes. Says stuff he believes is true, but anyone with common sense can see he's wrong. A dumbass.
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