Subj : Re: Screens Distract Stud To : AARON THOMAS From : Rob Mccart Date : Tue Apr 08 2025 01:10:00 RM> Not at all a comment on you guys but the number of people I've run into RM> over the years with university degrees that were total idiots is amazing. AT>This probably depends on where you end up working. Actually, my most memorable experience with that was a woman I dated for a year. I figured having a University degree was no guarantee of high intelligence if she was any example.. B) Oddly, during one long day when at the family home I met her brother who was about to graduate university and he started off talking down to me because he'd heard I didn't have a degree, but then we got into talking computer programming and other complex issues and he ended up changing his thinking about me.. He was a lot smarter than his sister though.. B) RM> Ha.. On a somewhat unrelated line.. I once applied for work at RM> the post office when they had a hiring blitz going on. I figured RM> it was a relatively stable job with good pay and benefits, but RM> the hiring process was pretty extreme with I.Q. and Psyche tests RM> required. I later heard back from them and was told that I was not RM> suited for the job because I'd scored too high on the I.Q. tests. AT>I had the opposite experience. I took a test to become eligible for a postal >ker job and I failed, bigtime. It was a memorization test, and I couldn't mem >ze the stuff. They gave us like 5 minutes to read and try to memorize address > and I couldn't do it. (But I swear that I could deliver mail just as well as >e next guy if I were given the chance.) That was so long ago I don't even remember what was on the tests but it took a couple of hours to do it as I recall.. But there was a whole room of people taking the tests. Maybe they were opening a new post office branch or something. In more recent years I wrote 3 hours of tests for a possible job, the tests supplied and marked by an outide agency at a cost of $300 to the place wanting to hire you. In the end I didn't get the job because someone in head office decided to give the job to an existing employee instead, but when they called me back to explain that to me, the guy who was there when I did the test, laughed and said he shouldn't probably show it to me but he got out the test results and the two main comments on it were that I would have to be careful because I might be too friendly with the workers which can make giving orders a challenge.. But the funny part was, they said that I had scored so high on the Math and Physics parts of the I.Q. test they *highly* suspected I had cheated. Since the guy who gave me the test was sitting there with me the whole time he knew that wasn't possible. As for memory, I'm not sure I was really great at that, although in school I never studied for tests or did homework that wasn't going to be marked and still managed to get through.. But later I went into Real Estate for a while and the college courses for the licensing involved a bunch of long, complex, legal phrasing to draw up a legal sales document. In real life you can just copy that from somewhere in the office but not when taking tests. You needed 80% to pass the test, and I got 89% I recall, but after the final class where we were given our marks the teacher pulled me aside before I left and said that I had all the legal phrases in my clauses that were required but my wording was quite a bit different than what they had given us to memorize and he asked where I'd gotten them. I told him that I didn't memorize the clauses, I just learned what they had to contain and then wrote them from scratch on the exam.. So.. still memory work I guess but not empty memorizing that a lot of people might do without understanding why it was required. --- * SLMR Rob * Four out of five herrings that smoke get bagels * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (1:2320/105) .