Fuck Physics!

lildeb1258

New member
i think maybe the instructor was saying it like 'yeh right, just know the vocab and you'll be fine...' and then rolled his/her eyes and kinda did that pfft thing.
but yeh, it's always good to know how to apply the vocab.
 
Whats that? To beat you over the head repeatedly until your brain matter oozes out your ears?

If you think physics in high school is tough, don't bother trying to get through it in college. I did, and almost flunked out. I was on academic probation for 2 semesters (also disciplinary probation, but that was because I'm an idiot and I drink too much.)

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Ahhh!!! Schrodinger's equation!!! Death be to physics majors!!! And what the fuck? H-bar? Gay shit.
 
Holy shit! I'm getting burned terribly lmao. First off, I know it was my fault if I failed. I was just being lazy. Next, I know the teacher is a push over, and the curve will bring my grade back up. I guess my whole point of this post was, basically, that it's wrong for a teacher to tell you something is going to be on a test and then not putting it on there. Sorry if I mislead everyone; my mistake:tongue:



I don't intend to take physics in college. I imagine college level physics would be pretty rough. But then again, I don't have to worry about that since I'm pursuing audio engineering.
 
If said physics major was put in a controlled environment, aka a sealed box, and the box underwent a series of controlled tests, what is the probability that said physics major would still be alive?

Schrodinger's cat is dead. No, wait...
 
Actually, I don't think it's wrong at all. It differentiates out those who were actually listening when the material was taught the first time and those who care enough about the subject to want to know it for its own sake, from the lazy ones who just memorise what they're told is on the test and then forget it again immediately after. It means the ones who score highly are the ones who actually know the subject and the trained parrots get marked at their true level of understanding. When it comes to real life, no-one tells you what's on the test.
 
So just for an update to everyone, the physics test that I 'failed' I ended up getting a 104 on haha, which only further proves my point that I wasn't ranting about the physics itself, but only ranting about the fact that an instructor should not inform their students that something will be on a test and change their mind at the last minute. I understand that a teacher does have the right to do this, but it is still wrong in my opinion because all the students who actually know the subject waste time on studying what the instructor was only using to trap the "trained parrots," as Talitha put it.
 
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