Emmett is 13! That's bananas. I am so freaking old -- I know this because I am more or less the same age I was when he was Darth Tigger.
Spike ,'Sleeper'
Natter 64: Yes, we still need you
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Aims, if your sister hadn't spelled out before the test that she would automatically fail any test that used text speak, then I'm somewhat, make that highly, affronted on the student's behalf. You shouldn't get negative credit for something like that unless the teacher has been explicit about it ahead of time.
What Plei Said.
idea of answering a question on a quiz or test with textspeak? Absurd
Happens all the time if the teacher doesn't set other expectations.
but man, the idea of answering a question on a quiz or test with textspeak? Absurd.
But the alternative would have been leaving it blank, presumably. So she wouldn't have gotten credit for that question anyway. Why should that have affected her correct answers on the rest of the quiz?
Maybe she should have told them ahead of time, but man, the idea of answering a question on a quiz or test with textspeak? Absurd.
In my industry, we use TLA shorthand all the time, so it doesn't seem absurd to me in a class outside of English. We also communicate a lot over IM, of course.
Back in the day, we'd just write ? for ones we didn't know.
I just don't understand why spelling things out is difficult.
Of course, I'm a linguist. I spell things out in several freaky languages, just because I like orthography.
But the alternative would have been leaving it blank, presumably. So she wouldn't have gotten credit for that question anyway. Why should that have affected her correct answers on the rest of the quiz?
What Jessica Said.
but man, the idea of answering a question on a quiz or test with textspeak? Absurd.
What if it's an essay test with a 140 character limit for the answers?
Back in the day, we'd just write ? for ones we didn't know.
Yep, me too. I didn't want to give the impression that I'd just forgotten to answer the question.
What if it's an essay test with a 140 character limit for the answers?
Hahahaha! That'd be AWESOME.