Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

I think what you're saying is both besides the point and incorrect.

Firstly, not studying, ignoring safety rules, or half-assing a task at work are behaviors, they don't necessarily reflect understanding or intelligence. Sometimes I get up late and have to rush in the morning, that doesn't mean I lack the intelligence to understand that time passes when I sleep.

Secondly, I don't think that most people fail to see the connection between not studying and failing a test. They might give other excuses for emotional or practical reasons, but I think you'll have a hard time finding anyone who genuinely claims that studying doesn't usually lead to better test scores. Same for ignoring safety rules or half-assing work.



> I think you'll have a hard time finding anyone who genuinely claims that studying doesn't usually lead to better test scores.

I know dozens of people that have told me to my face that they don't need to attend lectures to pass a course, and then fail the course.

Coincidentally, most of my graduating class is unemployable.

It's not a lack of understanding or intelligence, but it is an attitude that is no longer necessary.

If I wanted someone to do a half-assed job at writing code until it compiles and then send the results to me for code review, I'd just pay an AI. The market niche for that person no longer exists. If you act like that at work, you won't have a job.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: