I went back to study a 2013-14. Chem teacher commented about how coincidental it was the written response provided by several students as a type of bond was ‘territory’ considering the question prior indicated tertiary bonds /facepalm
Could they be any stupider…š¤
Same group of students all submitted the same assignment making sure to put their own name on the front page. Might have helped if they’d bothered to remove the original student name from the footer on every page š
Back when I used to grade intro to physics papers in my lab days I would get all sorts of stuff like this from people. Fun fact: If you even try to answer a little bit you’ll get partial credit.
And I had lots of non-STEM students treat physics like it was an english or anatomy class, where if you didn’t study or memorize that particular part of the textbook you were hosed. That’s not true at all, the best part about most STEM classes is that you can usually work out what you’re supposed to do just by looking at the question itself and exercising some common sense, no formula sheet or encyclopedic knowledge of the textbook required.
Granted it’s been like 17 years since I took chem, but that looks really straightforward, especially given the bit of table above we can see… What didn’t they study?
If you just mix H2 with N2, nothing happens at all.
If it would just form ammonia without any form of heat, pressure, love or catalyst added, industrial agriculture would have been an invention of the middle ages
One of my few shining points from high school physics was having read an article that linked short term memory loss with artificial sweeteners. We took a test that had three questions…which meant passing meant acing the test. Two of the questions I knew by heart and one of them I flat blanked and couldn’t even begin to properly address. After staring at it for twenty minutes I gave up, wrote “I forgot” and cited the article I had read. He gave me full credit for the question wrote in that if I showed anyone he’d fail me next semester.
My guy lives stress free š¤£
Am I the only one sitting here thinking this problem doesn’t give enough info? We need to know the amount of Ca(OH)2
Absolutely hated chemistry. Sorry for this info.
Stoichiometry, havenāt slipped that one in to casual conversation for a while.
I suddenly donāt feel so bad about my god awful handwriting.
Does he write his 2’s in reverse? You know from bottom to top?
I went back to study a 2013-14. Chem teacher commented about how coincidental it was the written response provided by several students as a type of bond was ‘territory’ considering the question prior indicated tertiary bonds /facepalm
Could they be any stupider…š¤
Same group of students all submitted the same assignment making sure to put their own name on the front page. Might have helped if they’d bothered to remove the original student name from the footer on every page š
I cant read his handwriting. What is the last word of the first sentence?
Real deal is the OK from the teacher š
Back when I used to grade intro to physics papers in my lab days I would get all sorts of stuff like this from people. Fun fact: If you even try to answer a little bit you’ll get partial credit.
And I had lots of non-STEM students treat physics like it was an english or anatomy class, where if you didn’t study or memorize that particular part of the textbook you were hosed. That’s not true at all, the best part about most STEM classes is that you can usually work out what you’re supposed to do just by looking at the question itself and exercising some common sense, no formula sheet or encyclopedic knowledge of the textbook required.
Granted it’s been like 17 years since I took chem, but that looks really straightforward, especially given the bit of table above we can see… What didn’t they study?
I like how he wrote the first chemical equation, crossed it out, and then wrote the same one again
your friend sounds like me and has the exact same handwriting. it’s a little creepy lol
He got the stoic part right
If you just mix H2 with N2, nothing happens at all.
If it would just form ammonia without any form of heat, pressure, love or catalyst added, industrial agriculture would have been an invention of the middle ages
Does this person wants to be a MD or pharmacist? Not mine!
Should it be -3 or 0?
So how do I solve this? I didn’t take chemistry.
Easy, the answer is 5.
your partner looks like he has the exact same handwriting as me, at first i thought i wrote this and was very confused.
M1V1 = M2V2
One of my few shining points from high school physics was having read an article that linked short term memory loss with artificial sweeteners. We took a test that had three questions…which meant passing meant acing the test. Two of the questions I knew by heart and one of them I flat blanked and couldn’t even begin to properly address. After staring at it for twenty minutes I gave up, wrote “I forgot” and cited the article I had read. He gave me full credit for the question wrote in that if I showed anyone he’d fail me next semester.
Holy shit thats my hand writing.
M1+V1= M2+V2
I think lol the moles and molarity isnāt that hard
this guy maths the risks pretty well
I ducking hate stoichometry I would live with out those 3 marks too.
He probaly got them because the 3 points didnt make a different. But cool from the teacherš š¤
Not really funny. Iāve done the same
most professors will find a way to give you 1 point just for attempting a question, even if itās embarrassingly wrong
He should work on his handwriting. I’m no expert but in Chemistry I’m sure you want your instructions to be clear.
You can live with half of what school teaches you.
I used to write āidk but hereās a doodleā and make a little comic for the teacher. Usually Iād get a point if I made them laugh.
God i remember firing one of these off in p chem, had no idea what the question was even asking.