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1. MrJohz+(OP)[view] [source] 2024-06-06 05:46:22
And more importantly, because it sidesteps the interesting pedagogy around edge cases and testing that the instructor is interested in.
replies(1): >>vsnf+r
2. vsnf+r[view] [source] 2024-06-06 05:51:58
>>MrJohz+(OP)
The correct solution here is to give credit for the problem to acknowledge genuine clever problem solving, and then offer extra credit for doing it the pedagogical way.
replies(1): >>MrJohz+E1
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3. MrJohz+E1[view] [source] [discussion] 2024-06-06 06:05:56
>>vsnf+r
There is no correct solution here. A classroom is not a test environment.

The goal is to learn, and the point of the exercises is to teach a specific concept. If a student finds a different way around the problem, that may show that they're already proficient in other skills, but they haven't necessarily learned the concept being taught in this class yet. A good instructor would probably acknowledge the solution, but add extra boundaries to the task to get the student to explore the problem in a way that lets them encounter the testing difficulties discussed here.

It's like smuggling a calculator into a class about mental maths strategies: you'll probably do very well in the final test, but you won't have learned anything!

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