The Assessment Fiasco

I typed an essay on what hap­pened about the assess­ment fiasco yes­ter­day, but it went and lost a cookie again (I walked away, the total “page open” time would have been about 2-3hours, so that’s under­stand­able), so there goes a few pages of entertainment/grief/boredom, depend­ing on who you are.

Just out of curios­ity, who ARE you?  I’m look­ing at the Netscape user/users who have accounted for 60% of my traf­fic thus far this month.  I’m impressed.  I thought Netscape was dead, but evi­dently not.  Well.  Maybe it is.  But then, at least the Un-Dead browser users are com­ing and vis­it­ing my web­site.  The browsers are un-dead, that is, not the users.  Although they may be as well.  Who knows… write if you’re an un-dead user vis­it­ing this web­site, okay?

An un-dead user run­ning Netscape, espe­cially.  You know what’s REALLY inter­est­ing?  59.4% of the users are run­ning an OLD OLD OLD ugly ver­sion of Netscape.  Well, okay, so it’s not that old.  But 6.2.1 is get­ting mildly ancient for many peo­ple to be using, I would think.  At least it isn’t 4.x — I don’t know how nice that would play with all the CSS in these parts — not that it really mat­ters… If it can’t do it, the web­site is seman­ti­cally accept­able when dis­played as plain text in lin­ear form.  Don’t believe me?  Load up your favourite WAP browser, and assum­ing there isn’t any­thing par­tic­u­larly quirky on my front page at that point in time, it should dis­play plenty fine.

Yes.  So.  About that assess­ment.  I’m typ­ing this in a hum­ble text edi­tor, sim­ply so I don’t have to worry about ses­sion times, and will just copy and paste in when I’m done, how­ever many hours that may take, heh.

It all began on Mon­day after­noon this week (it’s only this week for another 3 hours 42 min­utes as I type this — okay, okay, enough dis­trac­tions!), as I arrived (late, due to a cer­tain con­certs un-punctuality… or some­thing) to Exten­sion Eng­lish to be told that our teacher (Mrs. Christie) had marked most of the assess­ments, but there were a hand­ful remain­ing; we would not have them returned that day, how­ever we were wel­come to col­lect them when they became avail­able at 8 a.m. the morn­ing fol­low­ing from recep­tion in BBC.  That said, she wanted to read out some of them which she had already marked to the class.

The “class com­bi­na­tion” thing hap­pened, as it some­times does, and we were all (at least, I was, and oth­ers also made snide remarks to the same effect) antic­i­pat­ing Mrs. Crump launch­ing into a power-trip dri­ven tirade about… what­ever it is that lady speaks about (I’ve never quite both­ered to ascer­tain that one).  That didn’t hap­pen: both classes were com­bined so that she (Mrs. Christie, not the cats mother) could com­ment on the assess­ments, and read out some of them to the class(I’ll drop the “es” — the plural is implied from here on in, okay?).

Alex McSkimming’s story was read out (title unre­called, plot was dri­ven by real-world events; appar­ently, the asso­ci­a­tion between reli­gious sym­bol­ogy, specif­i­cally Chris­t­ian sym­bols, and Vam­pires — or at least the repul­sion of — came about as a result of the Churches pol­icy with regard to the Black Plague.  I really want to read it again, for the con­tex­tual expla­na­tion and reflec­tion as much as for the story itself), and then another — Andrew Garrett’s com­po­si­tion, reflect­ing on the neces­sity of Blood for life — it wasn’t as Renfield-ish as it sounds — it was draw­ing (not draw­ing blood!) par­al­lels between the Blood Bank as a nec­es­sary com­po­nent of soci­ety for the preser­va­tion of life, and Vam­pires con­sump­tion of Blood as nec­es­sary for the con­tin­u­a­tion of THEIR life.  Mine was next.  At least, the first draft of mine was next.

She lifted the folder, and flipped to the story.  The cov­er­sheet fell into my view;  I asked “Are you sure you want to read that ver­sion out?  That’s my first draft, judg­ing from the cover sheet…”.  She was some­what con­fused… “Oh, so it is… I hope I didn’t mark you on that one!”  Insert ner­vous laugh­ter from all par­ties here.  The story was laid down, and she con­tin­ued to speak about some­thing else.  I was assured that she’d look at it, and let me know the fol­low­ing morn­ing — although she was “sure” she hadn’t.

8 a.m. came and went.  I didn’t get to school until 8:20, but from talk­ing to other peo­ple, I don’t think that many went and even tried to get theirs back in the morn­ing.  Mrs. Christie came down­stairs (or maybe not… I don’t know where her office lies) when called, and…

Yeah.  I can’t remem­ber how she phrased it.  My re-telling of the sequence of events has always begun with “Guess what!”.  I’d already guessed, of course — the glass is half empty.  Do you know what really bites about the whole thing at this point?  She’d just told me how much she liked my draft, and what mark I was to get for it.  Now, there are cer­tain marks which… aren’t con­ducive to mak­ing stu­dents want a remark.  This was one of them.  ANYWAY.  She was to re-examine the final copy, and I was to return at recess.

Done.

I return at recess to be told that Alanna has enquired/complained/tortured small ani­mals about why she got the mark she did, and as such the return of all as-yet-unreleased assess­ments was on hold as mis­cel­la­neous teach­ers took another look at the assessments.

That’s alright.  I can deal with that.  I’m not hang­ing out for a mark or any­thing here.

Lunch. I return, to be informed by Mrs. Court (the recep­tion­ist in BBC) that all the assess­ments were in a pile here.  There was a ges­ture, too ;).  Of course, mine wasn’t.  It was in a dis­tinc­tive red folder, and was at a glance evi­dently not there.  I flipped through the pile any­way, before say­ing “Could you please call Mrs. Christie again?”

And so, again, she came from ThatPlaceWhereMrs.Christie’sOfficeIs™ to recep­tion.  Aaand mine hadn’t been marked, due to a lack of free classes for her that day, or some­thing.  I was to return that after­noon, again.

After­noon came, as did I.  I was expelled by the Dean of the Senior Col­lege.  Seri­ously!  Appar­ently I’d been loi­ter­ing in recep­tion too much, or some­thing.  Mrs. Earle is great fun ;)  Any­way.  It is at this point where I begin to tire telling the story, because up until now, the time­frame looked as though the whole thing would be resolved in a day.  Nope!

She arrived, and we sat down.  Actu­ally, she arrived, said “I haven’t had a chance to read it yet, can you come back in 10″, I made a phone call, walked around mind­lessly for a bit, then came back, and THEN we sat down.  But I digress (again).  In her read­ing of the weighty tome (where weighty = prob­a­bly less than 100 grams), she has unveiled a dark and pow­er­ful secret.  So Un-Dead was my story, that two pages had arisen, and, unaided, made their escape (ess-ka-pey!) from the clutches of the Eng­lish depart­ment!  Or maybe I failed to sub­mit it, or she lost it.  Hey, one of the above will do — per­son­ally, I’m more excited about the first explanation.

Hav­ing read the doc­u­ment in its entirety, she decided that my story had regressed in clar­ity (at least, cer­tainly within the first sec­tion) between the first and sec­ond drafts.  You know what?  I could have told you that!  Some­thing to do with unfath­omable word lim­its?  Nah.  But that’s cool.  I’ll drop it.  I went 700 words over, so I can’t com­plain too much.  I’ll have a fur­ther rant about clar­ity and her/the depart­ments mark­ing schemes in a while — for now, there are other things to address.

Now, the cov­er­sheet and first page of the final draft were some­what AWOL — or with leave, what­ever.  At this point, she asked a ques­tion which I am still get­ting over — this, ladies and gen­tle­men, is a full 4 days (or is it 5?  Meh, I’m doing exten­sion ENGLISH, not MATHS!) on, and I have yet to START mov­ing on past this ques­tion.  It was, with­out a doubt, the stu­pid­est thing I’ve ever heard a teacher say.

“Now, should I give you nine­teen, or twenty for this?  What do you think you deserve?”

I’m sorry, you just DON’T ask a stu­dent that.  Regard­less as to whether or not you believe they would give an appro­pri­ate answer or not.  Per­son­ally, I don’t think ANYONE should EVER get “full marks” in any sub­jec­tively marked sub­ject (because, despite the best efforts of the Board of Stud­ies to destroy lit­er­a­ture and define mark­ing as neat, easy, criteria-based “tick-a-box” mark­ing, that isn’t the way it works.  That is some­thing I would really strug­gle with as a teacher, I think…) at the best of times, sim­ply because there is no such thing as a per­fect text.  There is that, and then there is my desire to achieve — but ask­ing for 20 doesn’t pro­vide a sense of achieve­ment, anyway.

Per­haps that was the motive behind the ques­tion?  Whether I answered “nine­teen” or “twenty”, the result was the same — my mark, as per­ceived by myself, had decreased.  I said “I’m not answer­ing that, I can’t answer that objec­tively — can I bring in a reprint of those pages tomor­row, so that you can re-mark it?”.

What hap­pened next was nearly as astound­ing.  Hav­ing just explained why I had lost the mark, con­cern was voiced that I may take this oppor­tu­nity to edit the first page appro­pri­ately, in order to regain the mark.  “Can I trust you not to change it?”.  I don’t remem­ber what I said now.  Whether it was “That’s up to you” or “Hang on, you just asked me what I should get for my own work, and yet you don’t trust me to make a reprint, even though my edit­ing, IF ANY would have to be per­fect to the point that the sen­tence which was con­tin­ued on page two of the text flowed as though no change on the first page had occurred at all?  I’m sorry, please, give, me twenty or nine­teen right now as you wish.” I hon­estly couldn’t say.  Tech­ni­cally, edit­ing so that the first page flowed into the sec­ond seam­lessly would have been near impos­si­ble.  AND, that’s assum­ing I could be both­ered.  I’m sorry, but I like to think I have more of a life than that (not to men­tion moral­ity and a sense of values).

What­ever I said, the out­come was she was will­ing to let me bring in a reprint the fol­low­ing day.

This is Wednes­day:
I come to school, drop the print­out at recep­tion ask­ing that it be given to Mrs. Christie as was con­ve­nient, and return in the after­noon.  It hasn’t been marked.

Thurs­day comes.  I seize Mrs. Christie in the cor­ri­dor, and am informed I have 19 as a final mark.  I am happy.  I have clo­sure.  I also have a mark of 95% for a work which really doesn’t deserve even that (espe­cially con­sid­er­ing my com­plete vio­la­tion of any con­cerns of brevity, with my FINAL com­ing in at 1700ish, and the first draft sit­ting at a lovely 2000).

I still haven’t both­ered to retrieve my phys­i­cal copy, that can wait until next Tuesday’s lesson.

Now that the recount­ing is over, and heads are still spin­ning, I’m going to launch into a tirade.

CLEAR!!!

Okay.  There are a few things.  Firstly, the sub­ject of per­fect marks.  I addressed it before, but since this is where I’m vent­ing about all the things I think are wrong with it, it needs to be men­tioned (at least briefly) again.

IT
SHOULD
NEVER
HAPPEN
in sub­jec­tive subjects.

Lit­er­a­ture is not math­e­mat­i­cal, it is not sci­en­tific.  It is abstract, free, more beau­ti­ful than math­e­mat­ics — end­less scope for rigid struc­ture or dis­jointed abstrac­tion is per­mit­ted within its bounds, and this is some­thing no insti­tu­tion should even think of try­ing to break down into sim­ple criterions.

Why?  Because, for one, being (poten­tially) that abstract, there is an incred­i­bly nar­row prob­a­bil­ity of pre-emptively cre­at­ing cri­te­ria to suit the work which shall be sub­mit­ted.  Addi­tion­ally, the assign­ment of marks to (espe­cially) cre­ative works is some­thing which is just another part con­tribut­ing towards the score-obsessed high school cul­ture which exists in NSW (and prob­a­bly the rest of the world) in the senior years today.

The need for quan­tifi­ca­tion is recog­nised, how­ever this can­not be broadly applied to things such as it is now!

I’ll leave that where it is, else this post may dou­ble in length again.

My sec­ond… objec­tion towards this whole thing is about the REASONS my first draft scored perfectly.

It wasn’t per­fect!  Pre­vi­ous com­ments aside, I haven’t seen the cri­te­ria, so this is all “spec­u­la­tion” (O! Look what they have done to us! The author spec­u­lates upon his own work, as the BoS looks over us and gloats!).  But there were at least FOUR PRINTED PAGES which WERE INCLUDED with my sub­mit­ted assess­ment CLEARLY DOCUMENTING AND OUTLINING THE NEED FOR CHANGES IN the first draft!  Com­ments were included both from myself (which is accept­ably dis­counted, as any com­ments should be included in reflec­tions, but this was not), Alec Sewell, and Sam Holloway!

Gram­mar, struc­ture, spelling, clar­ity, frag­men­ta­tion, and pre­sen­ta­tion of con­cepts was (in my opin­ion) much bet­ter exe­cuted in the pro­ceed­ing edits than in the orig­i­nal.  And I’m not the only one to think so.

The impli­ca­tion of this is some­what dis­turb­ing.  Either the orig­i­nal edit (1st draft) was not read as the orig­i­nal when the mark was assigned — that is, prior to los­ing the first two pages of the final copy (yes, that was an accu­sa­tion — I don’t know if it was me or her, but I’m fairly sure I sub­mit­ted it), it was marked, and scored 20 — or the orig­i­nal edit was mis­marked to the extent that DOCUMENTED errors were overlooked.

Either way, and in both my com­plaints, a “per­fect mark” is clearly of lit­tle sig­nif­i­cance where such errors may abound unseen, unde­tected, and appar­ently unim­por­tantly.  The more I think about it, the more I want to see this cri­te­ria sheet.  I have a feel­ing my sus­pi­cions about the inef­fec­tive­ness of sub­jec­tive “tick-a-box” mark­ing may have just been con­firmed, or at least strengthened…

as such sus­pi­cions are merely sub­jec­tive, of course. ;)

The intricacies of Milo consumption

Before I get onto the Milo, there are some other things to address.  I was going to post an IT depart­ment rant, but I’ll hold myself back for a few days until I have more to rant about.  It’s coming.

Yay, I finally have an intranet page for myself which I’m happy with!  I’ve got an RSS reader in a float­ing DIV on the left, and my links down the right, all of which fea­ture handy dandy accesskey codes (I can press “Alt+I” and goto my sys­tem sta­tus page, or “Alt+G” and go to my Gallery, things like that).  Woohoo.  What’s changed from my pre­vi­ous intranet incar­na­tions?  This time around, I’ve added my RSS reader, stripped links to the bare essen­tials only, and added accesskey attrib­utes to the links.  So that’s ocol.

I went and saw the den­tist yes­ter­day.  I resisted the temp­ta­tion of run­ning up yet another WAP bill, because last month was sort of expen­sive (and that was a month sans den­tist vis­its!).  Fired a few mes­sages off all over the place, though ;)  So yeah.  I was there get­ting two pre­ven­ta­tive fill­ings, what­ever that is.  Some­thing about a hole that isn’t really a hole and isn’t really there because of decay, but has the poten­tial to become a prob­lem because food could get lodged in there and stuff.  Sounds like an excuse for them to get $300, to me.  But hey!  I got trippy numb­ing stuff injected into my gums, so that was all good.

Because the fill­ings were plas­tic and UV treated (well, I think it was UV… they had this insano torch which they seemed to be bak­ing my teeth with, whilst shield­ing them­selves from the evi­dently harm­ful radi­a­tion the ray gun was emit­ting… so it mightn’t be UV, but it was some kind of light­ish stuff that glowed), I could eat as soon as I wanted.  Yay!  So I went home, and did the Milo thang.

Note to self:  BAD IDEA!!! NEVER AGAIN!!!

…on with the story!  Yeah.  Milo with numbed gums and reduced-mobility lips is fun.  The fact that I couldn’t say “pro­vi­sion­ing” should have been a bad sign — alas, I didn’t let any­thing stand between me and the Milo!

Now, I’m one of those peo­ple who’ll fill a glass up halfway (so it’s half EMPTY, folks)… with Milo.  And then the milk starts going in.  And then it’s stirred slightly, and the Milo rises to the top, and it is CONSUMED!!! Muwha­ha­ha­haha.  Yes, it’s a food-drink.  Not a food, not a drink.  (Aside: Well, occa­sion­ally a food, rarely a drink.)  Eat­ing half-dampened (by milk) Milo is an intri­cate pro­ce­dure, involv­ing extreme mobil­ity of the upper lip.

Firstly, the per­son who is to devour the Milo (here­after: “the Devourer”) must care­fully load the eat­ing device (“the Spoon”) with Milo from the cup, tak­ing care not to lose any of the pre­cious sub­stance in the process.

Sec­ondly, the Spoon must be raised to the mouth of the Devourer, plac­ing it inside with great precision.

Next, the spoon must be removed from the mouth, scrap­ing against the upper lip in order to dis­lodge Milo from the spoon into the mouth.

*insert record slow­ing to stop sound here*

Using your upper lip is fun when it’s pumped full of mis­cel­la­neous numb­ing drugs.  That has to have been THE most chal­leng­ing Milo I’ve ever eaten!

Moral of this story?  You’ve got to be made of Milo.  But just avoid if for a few hours if you’re drugged.

# by Josh on July 28th, 2004 Tags: , , ,
| 6 Comments »

Ideal weblog application

Voice recog­ni­tion.  All the way.  Sure, it could get expen­sive, but pre­sum­ably not more so than WAP would be (well, okay; it would be, but if any value at all is placed on time, then call­ing a num­ber and dic­tat­ing ownz try­ing to type into a mobile key­pad anyday!).

It’d mean I could walk between build­ings and blog as I go, not in a crappy wi-fi enabled kind of way (although, admit­tedly, if SACS cov­er­age extended to the vicin­ity sur­round­ing the school, I’d prob­a­bly have bought a wire­less card by now and had a hack at mak­ing it work), but in a flu­ent, hands-free, talk-into-phone-and-content-appears-online kind of way.

How cool would that be?!  Never again would there be a com­plaint of “you haven’t updated your blog since last time I checked a few hours ago!”, because not an hour would pass with­out a phonecall and a voice-enabled update of the website!!

Well, okay.  An hour would pass.  In fact, many hours would pass.  But it’s a cool idea, don’t you think?  Still, sev­eral phone calls a day (let’s throw three in the air as a ball­park fig­ure, not count­ing at-home updates) would add up.  Let’s do the maths, shall we?  Okay.  So, let’s say an Orange phone server­side, so I get free five minute phone calls from my baby Sam­sung.  Let’s make it pre­paid — not as though we’re mak­ing calls from it.

A charge­able call must be made within a 12 month period, or the ser­vice will get narfed.  Okay.  That’s cool, I can setup an SMS gate­way online and use that occa­sion­ally.  Bonus.  Cost?  Assum­ing I keep the calls under 5mins, noth­ing to con­nect — there’s a limit on the amount of free Orange-to-Orange time I can have a month, but it’s pretty ridicu­lously high, so I’d not worry about that too much — and the cost for the pre­paid?  Well, between $33 and $90, depend­ing on the expiry length required.  So if I go for $90, that gives me a year to use the credit.

At what rate?  $0.18/message sent, and of course, reciev­ing calls is free.

So let’s say about $50 a year, plus ini­tial hand­set cost.  Let’s face it, I’m not really one for both­er­ing to login to a web inter­face to send mes­sages most of the time — I’d use it, but not incred­i­bly often.

All this is of course ignor­ing the tech­ni­cal fea­si­bil­ity of using tele­phony as a voice-recognition medium — not only do cur­rent sys­tems strug­gle with micro­phones already, this is also with­out the other con­di­tions imposed on mobile lines!  The soft­ware side of things (i.e. inter­fac­ing with web panel/directly with MySQL) also presents a lit­tle bit of a chal­lenge, although not pro­hib­i­tive — it’d be a bit of fun, to say the least.

This’d make me blog more, though.  A lot more.  That said, I blog more when pro­cras­ti­nat­ing, or when hol­i­days are on — the sim­ple solu­tion?  Give me more hol­i­days (or assessments:|)!!!

Over­com­pli­ca­tion of a sim­ple prob­lem rocks.

End of term

Yay.  Man I am so up for hol­i­days… right now I can’t see them last­ing long enough!!  I spent the last two and a bit days doing a whole lot of not very much, between Show­case Con­cert (which was fairly aver­age, appar­ently lev­er­ing on cute-factor rather than pro­fes­sion­al­ism or qual­ity to draw an audi­ence) and a devel­op­ment ses­sion for the best part of today… and avoid­ing Galah Day in the process.

Ooops.  ;)

So that was inter­est­ing.  And astound­ingly unpro­duc­tive, but hey, I don’t really care!  Com­pletely over attend­ing classes and/or school stuff any­way (show­case doesn’t count as school stuff, just for the record ;) ), at this end of the term.  Espe­cially when half the school isn’t in classes either, hehe.  Peer pres­sure and all that. :p

In other excit­ing news, Tori’s web­site is finally live over @ http://toriworld.tk/.  Not a whole lot there yet, but at least it’s finally pub­lic, so per­haps updates will start pour­ing onto the web­site for the enter­tain­ment of the Con­nect­ed­Masses™!!  Hehe.  “w00t” ;)  Should I append ™ to that also?

Woooooo hol­i­days!!!  The Edge camp is hap­pen­ing this week­end, which is going to be very cool I hope… theme of the year is PIRATES!  I’m assured peo­ple are bring­ing cam­eras, so pho­tos will most prob­a­bly be pub­lished on Ben’s web­site some­time.  To all who aren’t going/can’t go, gonna miss you!

Back in a few days, pos­si­bly sooner if I try and do some­thing stu­pid like update this page via WAP.  I don’t think it’d work, because I use cook­ies for ses­sions man­age­ment, so unless my phone sup­ports cook­ies I can’t login to my CMS panel.  It might, it might…  but it’s prob­a­bly not worth the effort to type with a phone key­pad, let alone the cost ;)

# by Josh on June 25th, 2004 Tags: ,
| No Comments »

Oh, thatd be right

The first post I make after access­ing it with uberly expen­sive WAP  just hap­pens to be the 11th, push­ing the file­size of the front page down to slightly above 4KB, or 15c.

As men­tioned pre­vi­ously, den­tists are the cause of all sorts of angst when it comes to dou­ble book­ings by cer­tain peo­ple… now exor­bi­tant mobile costs can be added to that list ;)

Got to love den­tists.  I’m meant to be going back in a few weeks… an oppor­tu­nity for “most expen­sive post”?

# by Josh on May 19th, 2004 Tags:
| No Comments »

The most expensive webpage

…that I’ve ever accessed is this one.  At the den­tist (or, nuisu, as I imag­i­na­tively man­aged to spell it in an SMS to some­one), this after­noon.  I’m pleased to note that this page dis­plays pretty nicely on a WAP browser, although the 3c/KB cost is some­what prohibitive.

I checked the size of the front page when I got home, and I’m think­ing the most it could have cost me is 51c, which I can deal with, I guess…  I was think­ing about mak­ing my “most expen­sive post ever” FROM my phone… now THAT would have been cool… but then I realised that would be two web­pages away, and I could see this get­ting ridicu­lous — espe­cially see­ing that (of course), I would have to check the front page again (another 51c + the amount of data in the mes­sage posted x 3c) just to make sure that it worked… putting an entry up via WAP could eas­ily come to $2 with­out blinking.

Which is kind of scary, see­ing the most I’d ever paid for inter­net before then was $2.50/five min­utes for 33.6k dialup in a dodgy West­ern Aus­tralia hotel.  But any­way.  That is an expe­ri­ence I’d rather not reflect on, thankyou.

This expe­ri­ence, how­ever, rates as down­right cool… I so bet­ter not make this a habit, or my mobile bill will be… lets just say sev­eral kilo­bytes in length.