this post was submitted on 06 Jun 2025
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AI
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Artificial intelligence (AI) is intelligence demonstrated by machines, unlike the natural intelligence displayed by humans and animals, which involves consciousness and emotionality. The distinction between the former and the latter categories is often revealed by the acronym chosen.
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Seems pretty simple to me: No graded homework. Grade based on test scores, quizzes, and in-class work.
If a student needs heavily weighted homework/essay grades to offset mediocre test scores, they are a mediocre student and deserve their mediocre score.
Hard work is not a replacement for talent.
Most real life challenges take more time than a test though. You can ace tests and be shit at anything real.
My solution would be to give complex projects and have a mandatory presentation component with questions and discussion.
A presentation component is the kind of class work I mentioned.
When you hire someone to do a job for you, do you want someone who will bust their ass all day and turns in mediocre work? O
Or do you want someone who does the job quickly, efficiently, competently?
When you're working, do you want to bust your ass all day on something you are barely but technically qualified to perform? Or would you prefer to follow your passion?
Heavily weighting effort for effort's sake favors the talentless over the talented, and does neither any favors.
I will counter that even for talented people it’s important to learn work ethic and how to study.
Even someone who is not naturally talented can learn topics by disciplined study, that too is an important skill in life.
"Work ethic" does not mean "appreciation of hard work for the sake of working hard". "Work ethic" means, primarily, an appreciation for the maximization of your own productivity. That lesson is not being taught by compelling the student to spend excess time in a subject after achieving mastery.
The issue isn't that homework is assigned. The issue is when it is a heavily weighted component of the final grade. The instructor can go ahead and assign homework to allow the student to learn the topic through "disciplined study", but the effectiveness of that study (their developed "talent" for the subject matter) determined from testing and other in-class work.
The effort they put into their homework is irrelevant: they either master the subject matter, or they do not.
Bringing this back to "work ethic", their failure to achieve demonstrable mastery of the subject matter indicates the ineffectiveness of their "disciplined study". They should learn from this that "hard work" is a means to an end. "Hard Work" is not an achievement in and of itself.
Meanwhile, the students for whom such "study" is wasted effort are no longer unduly burdened. They are free to focus their time-intensive "disciplined studies" on subjects for which they need to make that effort, or they can take on additional non-burdened coursework. They can learn "work ethic" by mastering a greater variety of subjects, maximizing their productivity.
I don't think we should send kids out to break rocks just so they experience hard work, what I mean is kids should be challenged enough that they have to do research and learn to study so they can come up with strategies that are useful in life.
I do agree, working hard for hard works sake isn't super important, but being able to work hard when you need to is.
And as an example, I found pretty much all school easy until university, when I got a harsh reality check that doing the coarse work the morning it was due was a bad strategy in life. Avoiding that type of outcome would be preferable.