593 lines
32 KiB
Plaintext
593 lines
32 KiB
Plaintext
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A True American's Guide to Success in Lower Education
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by
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Peregrinus Jupiter
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15 July, 1992
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"I went to the woods because I wanted to live deliberately, to front only the
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essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and
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not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived. I did not wish to live
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what was not life, living is so dear; nor did I wish to practise resignation,
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unless it was quite necessary. I wanted to live deep and suck out all the
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marrow of life..." --Henry David Thoreau, `Walden'
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It is to this spirit of life that this file is dedicated. Education, in
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its purest and most noblest form happens all the time, and most real education
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happens when we put all the frivolities of the world aside and look life smack
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in the face. It was Socrates who said that the unexamined life is not worth
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living. So therefore, if you are reading this file to avoid gaining the
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understanding of life that makes us human, go jump off a cliff.
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Education involves reading and thinking and observing and confronting. The
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process of gaining a true education is a source of true ecstacy for the spirit.
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It's an ecstacy that drugs or alcohol cannot approximate. Gaining a true
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education can also be disturbing. You may discover that you are not who you
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thought you were; that other things are not what you thought they were.
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Fundamental and unalterable concepts which guided your life since you sucked the
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milk from your mother's breasts may suddenly dissolve. You may find yourself
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soaring to the heights of Olympus on the breath of Truth or you may find
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yourself throuwn against the brick wall of nihilism. But one thing is for
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certain: you will not die without having lived.
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Ok, I think that was enough Jack Handey to scare off the undesirables. Now
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I'll get to the point of all this. The very institution which is the arbiter of
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education in our society -- school -- has little to do with true education.
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Even the best schools infringe on the true exploration of the truths of the
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Universe, and the worst...well, exhibit more than a utilitarian interest in
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Truth and be labelled a nerd or a geek and be shoved into a locker. Don't let
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them kid you; school is a Behemoth which is engulfing humanity one spirit at a
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time.
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So to get right to it, this file will give you some advice on how to spend
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as little time on school as you possibly can, and leave as much time as possible
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for your real education. There are some quick tricks involved, but these are
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few. The real way to go about things is image projection. This file will help
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you learn to project the images you need to to turn things your way and get out
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of wasting more time than you need to on fulfilling the requirements of school,
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while getting good grades. I'll use myself as an example. Although I did less
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work than almost everyone in my class, I graduated third in my class, got a
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fistful of awards, got over $12,000 in scholarship money and will be attending
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an Ivy League school next year. So NYAH to you!
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Ok, before we get started, there's just a few things...
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1.) I sure as hell hope you're smart. Don't try to pull this off if you're not.
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Seriously: following the advice this file gives is not easy. You'll most
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likely get yourself into some sticky situations, and you'd better be able
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to bullshit your way out of them.
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2.) Start as early as you can at a particular school. The worst-case scenario
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in the public schools, where you're labelled one way or the other since
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kindergarten. A good time to start following this advice is about the
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beginning of sophomore year in high school. If you're younger than that, I
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doubt you have the ability to put into practice these directives.
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3.) If you can't see yourself doing these things, don't. It's as simple as
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that. Don't try to fake it, you'll just have to study like everyone else.
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Ok, let's go.
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"Those who can, do. Those who can't, teach."
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"Those who can't teach, teach gym." (corellary)
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Why do teachers teach? It's not for the money, that's for sure. We'll
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separate teachers into three classes:
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TYPE A: Up-and-comings. These teachers don't like teaching. They're using it
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as a stepping stone to a brilliant career in another field, more often than not
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one their parents pushed them into. Sometimes they majored in something
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ludicrous in college and have nothing else to do with the degree. Eventually if
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they keep teaching they may evolve into types B or C. These can be difficult
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ones to play. As a general rule, the smarter they are, the better off you are.
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TYPE B: Assholes. No other field in the world other than education would
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put up with these people. If you get the feeling that a particular teacher is
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in it just because they have a compulsive need to pick on you, they're probably
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type B. Anal-retentives, shop teachers, gym teachers, and like fit in here.
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Don't fuck with these people at first. When you're good at what you're doing,
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these will be the easiest type to play. But for now, lay off them.
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TYPE C: "Quality-teachers." Christa McAulliffe types. These are the jackpot.
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They are in it because they are devoted to learning and education and the like.
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These are the people who could teach at Universities if they wanted to, but they
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don't. THey teach honors courses. With just a little work, you can play these
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types like a fiddle. Oh, and if they graduated during the sixties, man o MAN
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you're gonna have some fun.
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Marvelous. Now, what's the point of breaking down all your teachers into three
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groups? Damned if I know. But in general, you should get inside the mind of all
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your teachers. Find out how they think. Find out what moves them. Find the
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skeletons in their closets. Do some good clean Freudian analysis. Do this even
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before you get them. If you're aspiring to the Ivy League or to a good college,
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try to get Type C teachers. Chances are, if a course is taught by a Type B
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person, that's not the type of course that will help you in your application.
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If you find that you like taking shop and gym and home economics, Godspeed and
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hope you enjoy East Bumfuck Community College!
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Dandy. I'm scaring off people by the millions. If you're left, hello. I like
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you. Let's get to work.
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The first rule that you must learn is: Teachers give smart kids good grades.
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Let's dissect the sentence.
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TEACHERS... yeah, the guy with the suspenders and tie at the front of the class
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pretending to be a professional.
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SMART KIDS. Hold on a minute. You know that girl in your class that studies
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40 hours a week, gets all A's, everyone expects to go to Harvard, never gets a
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date in her life? You know her? (Let's call her Mary; she's probably a
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virgin...) She's not smart. She thinks an A+ on the report card is the meaning
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of life. She WORKS for her grades. If you want to work for your grades, by
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all means do so. You don't need this textfile.
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Now you....you're smart. You know you are. You're not interested in anal-
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retentive little details. You're a "deep thinker." You see things other
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people don't. You understand yourself better than other people do. You're
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often spaced out. You have a lot of good horse sense. Oh, and you're
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reading this textfile. There, that proves it.
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GIVE...Mary earns her grades. You're not interested in earning your grades.
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You want teachers to GIVE them to you.
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GRADES...Those oppressive little marks which will dictate the rest of your
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life. That fact that you're about to cheat your way around them proves they
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are lousy.
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Teachers give smart kids good grades. It's quite simple.
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Now wait a minute, you're saying. Why haven't I been getting good grades then?
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Quite simply, your teachers don't know you're smart.
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We're going to change that.
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You see, everything has to do with image projection. Your teachers don't know
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you. They only know the image you project in school. So if you can convince
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smart, you'll get good grades. Why? Because your Type C teachers are smart
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too! You're the reason they went IN to teaching in the first place. They WANT
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to give you good grades.
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Albert Einstein was undoubtedly one of the most brilliant people to ever live.
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He saw things back in 1905 that have since proven to be true, but that no one
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since can even understand.
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Albert Einstein used to show up for work wearing his pajamas. Why? He was so
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preoccupied with larger things he'd forget to change his clothes.
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You are smart. You're like Albert Einstein. Einstein forgot to bring his suit
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and tie to work. You forget to bring your homework. Why? You're mind is on
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bigger things.
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Einstein went to work in his pajamas. Einstein won the Nobel Prize.
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You see, the Nobel Committee was willing to overlook the fact that Einstein went
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to work in his pajamas because he was SO smart he didn't have time to think
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about his clothes. Likewise, your teachers won't care if you don't do your
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homework...IF they think you also have your mind occupied with bigger and better
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things.
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So, here's how to go about it.
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DATELINE: DAY 1. The first day of school. Lovely, lovely. Teachers get awful
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sentimental about the first day of school. They've got a fresh new crowd of the
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*FUTURE OF AMERICA* sitting there waiting for their every word. So don't
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disappoint them! Sit in the front row! Let them see the admiration and wonder
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in your eyes. When Mary starts to take notes, take out the notebook (in good
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academic form) but don't take notes. Remember, you're too smart to worry about
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taking notes. Just sit and gaze at the teacher, and follow what he says. Make
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eye contact. Be interested in what he wants you to be interested in. Make him
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feel like the $20,000 a year is worthwhile. After class, don't rush off. Stay
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and ask a question. Some suggestions:
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ENGLISH: I was just interested in how the Department came up with this
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particular reading list...
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AMERICAN HISTORY: (laugh) I was just wondering if you think we'll make it to the
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Vietnam War this year.
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EUROPEAN HISTORY: I was just wondering if the course would be covering Post-
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World War II history as well.
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AFRICAN HISTORY/WORLD CULTURES: [What the fuck are you taking a politically
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course like that for? I sure as hell hope it's required!]
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CALCULUS: What exactly ARE the diffences between the AB and BC Calculus exams.
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(Question sure to follow: Are you interested in taking the BC exam?) Answer:
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Oh, maybe, I'll have to see. I do really well with the larger concepts, (laugh)
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but my downfall is the addition and subtraction. (i.e., I'm so concerned with
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the larger theories of calculus I don't have time for addition and
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subtraction...)
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PRE-CALCULUS: Does this course include all the material in the trigonometry
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course?
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TRIGONOMETRY: I hate to go off on a tangent, but will you cosine this? (Trust
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me, they LOVE this one!)
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GEOMETRY: Will we also be doing non-Euclidean geometry?
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FRENCH (beginning course): I heard that French is harder than Spanish... Why is
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that?
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FRENCH (advanced course): (laugh) So, are we reading Proust this year?
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SPANISH (beginning course): Do they teach the Castillian or the Latin-American
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pronunciation in this school?
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SPANISH (advanced course): (laugh) So, are we reading Cervantes this year?
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GERMAN: Will we be doing a unit on the old German alphabet?
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RUSSIAN: Do you know if there are word processor programs for the Cyrillic
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alphabet?
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ITALIAN: [What the hell are you taking Italian for?]
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PORTUGUESE: [Ditto.]
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LATIN (beginning course): Is the syntax of the sentences in this text based on
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the Classical syntax, like Wheelock?
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LATIN (advanced course): Why are are we studying (A) and not (B). [For A and B
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substitute Caesar, Ovid, Cicero, Horace, Catullus]
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ANCIENT GREEK: How long does it generally take to adjust to the alphabet?
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ART OF ANY TYPE: [These teachers are Arch-Type C's: you can bullshit about
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ANYTHING!]
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PHILOSOPHY: [Ditto]
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BIOLOGY/CHEMISTRY: How much laboratory work will there be?
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PHYSICS: Will we be studying primarily Classical Physics or Quantum as well?
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GYM: [This is a special case. DON'T stick around to ask a question. Grunt like
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a savage as you dash for the showers.]
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OTHER: [Use your imagination!]
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These types of questions are a good way to get a consistent dialogue going
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between you and your teacher. This dialogue is ESSENTIAL!!!!! Talk you your
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teachers as often as you can! Discuss the subject and discuss your own reaction
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to it. Look as if the things you are learning are REALLY affecting you. And
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keep asking these questions all the time...
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DATELINE: 1.5 WEEKS. Now's the time to catch your teacher aside. Look
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concerned. Something's not going right. "Hmm...this is kind of hard to say.
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I'm kind of worried about the direction things are going in in class. I mean, I
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can see what you're trying to do....[talk about something the teacher has been
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trying to get across] but I'm not sure everyone is picking up on it. (shrug) I
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dunno...maybe I get too worried..." Here's where it's started. You look deeply
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concerned about the direction of things. "Gee," thinks the teacher, "this kid
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is losing sleep over my class. He must be smart!" This will be the first of
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your "transcendental" dialogues. Again, here are some examples that worked.
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ENGLISH: "I don't know, I guess it's just that I'm worried that everyone in the
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class is getting so caught up in the details that we're all missing the point.
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I mean this is an AMAZING piece of Literature and I think that that's being lost
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by some of us." [Note: don't imply that this is the teacher's fault, just make
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it look like you are lamenting a sad fact of society....]
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PHILOSOPHY: "I don't know, I guess it's just that I think that we can all be so
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sure of ourselves that we refuse to accept what [name of philosopher] is trying
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to tell us. I mean, to gain a real understanding of what he's trying to way, I
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think you have to take a great deal on faith to get beyond that.....[grope for
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the right word].... superficial understanding..."
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CALCULUS: "Hmm....Some kids in the class had a rough go of things in Pre-Cal
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last year, and some of us are worried if that's likely to slow us up. Or is
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this year's course pretty independent of that...?"
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Anyway, you get the point. You're two weeks in, and you've already been noticed
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by your teacher. You're the kid in the class who is affected by what's going
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on. You're moved by it. You're disturbed when it doesn't go right. You're
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always wondering about the philosophical rammifications of things. You're in
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Physics? Suddenly, everything you study changes your perception of the
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universe. TALK about these things with your teacher.
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Be a teacher's pet....not by getting perfect grades like Mary, but by being the
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type of student your Type C teacher always dreamed about teaching; the type of
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student they once were. Plus, you're setting yourself up to save your ass
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later.
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OK, so now you're a month in and you're bored of studying. Good for you. Get
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on with the rest of your life. The teacher loves you. So you can taper off
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with studying and doing your homework. However, you always have to make it look
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like you are being more and more affected by what you are studying. (By the end
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of the year you will be acting like Einstein if all goes well...)
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Here's where the good acting comes in. You HAVE to be messy! Mary is neat.
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You are too smart to worry about keeping your papers in order. So LOOK messy.
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Have your papers all over the place. Have your homework that first month...but
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when they ask for it, purposely take longer and longer to find it. When they
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ask where it is, look through the pages of your copy of Scientific American and
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`Beyond Good and Evil' before finding it tucked away on Page 156 of `A Brief
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History of Time.' All the while, you have to look INCREDIBLY confused, like
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Einstein fumbling with his pajamas in front of the Nobel Committee. If the
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teacher makes a comment about organization, shrug. laugh, and say `I know, I
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know... I always try to organize things but I always have so much on my mind I
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forget where things are. One time I spent an hour looking for a set of keys I
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had in my right hand..." Therefore, deep into month 2 when you start showing up
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WITHOUT your homework, it won't surprise them. They'll just assume you have it
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somewhere. In fact, if you do enough fumbling and rustling to disturb the
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class, they'll probably VOLUNTEER that you turn it later. Neato. As I say, you
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can't go whole hog right away with being irresponsible; you've got to work up to
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it.
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Ok, now we've got some other aspects of your personality to develop. Firstly,
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you're going to portray yourself as a Messiah-figure. Except you're not saving
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the world: you're saving your school. How do you do this? Pick an
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extracurricular activity with some level of importance to it. Any school
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publication is best; since journalism seems to carry with it this whole attitude
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of saving the ignorant masses. I've had whole goddamn TESTS delayed as much as
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4 days just because I was busy with the school newspaper. Other good choices
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are student government, debating society, National Honor Society, and the like.
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No one's going to forgive you if you sacrifice your own grades in the name of
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the Chess Team, so be sure that what you do has some high-falootin' airs about
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it. Also, you can't just act dedicated, you've got to be a goddamn martyr. If
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you fuck up a test, approach the teacher afterwards and say, "I'm sorry about
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the way things have been going for me. It's just that the newspaper is in
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serious danger of folding up altogether, and that would be a disaster for the
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way things are around here..." Man, you've GOT to attach this serious
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importance to what you are doing. Oh, and by the way, pick one thing. A
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teacher will forgive you for martyring yourself for one cause, but he will not
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let you off the hook for a mediocre interest in 10 causes.
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Ok, another thing: You've got to appear in frail health all the time. Ways to
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do this: During a lecture, hold your head betweem your hands and try to work up
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a sweat. Act dead exhausted. If you're daring, you could even conspicuously
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pop a Tylenol. If the teacher asks "are you feeling ok?" you've hit the
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jackpot. Say "oh, yeah, I'll be fine, I think maybe I'm not getting enough
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sleep. Maybe I'm not getting enough fresh air..." Voila! Act like this often.
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And linger after class. If the teacher says "Why aren't you getting enough
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sleep?" here's the time to act the martyr. "I was so late here with the
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newspaper yesterday that I had to stay up all night to finish my homework."
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They'll love you for that one. If you have an arch-type C like a good English,
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Art, or Philosophy teacher, this one is a gem: "I was up `till 4 a.m. last night
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reading [insert name of a pillar of Western Literature]; it was just so...I
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don't know....I couldn't stop reading it." If they buy this one, you'll have
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them eating out of the palm of your hand for weeks to come.
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Benefits of "frail health?"
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A.) "I was too sick last night to finish my homework." Do this one BEFORE
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school, not during class when it is collected. Also, NEVER negotiate with a
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teacher like this during class because they always have a point to prove. If
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you have been successful in portraying yourself as sickly, they will believe
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this one, and will give you extra time to do it. Act concerned as hell: "Will I
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be able to follow along in class today without having done it? Maybe I start it
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at lunch..." Inevitable response "Oh, no, don't do that, I'm sure you'll be
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fine..."
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B.) Time off! Yes, you can stay out sick long and often and no one will get
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suspicious. Sick days are an excellent time to do an entire semester's worth of
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homework. This is a good time to mention that if you turn in something wicked
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late, they will be less nit-picky about the actual content than they would have
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if you had handed it in on time. Why? Because they are bored with the subject
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and they have their minds on current things.
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C.) Chicken Out! If you have to be in school for something in the morning but
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have a test on which you haven't studied in the afternoon, go home sick! It
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won't surprise anyone. They won't get suspicious. Exception: Public School
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Nurses. These people are trained to harrass the ill: "What's the matter? Why
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are you going home? What are you trying to get out of? A test?" Now, you have
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to play the supplicant with your teachers, but DO NOT TAKE SHIT FROM YOUR SCHOOL
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NURSE. If the school nurse even suggests that you are going home because of
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trying to get out of a test, GIVE THAT LADY THE WRATH OF GOD! Even threaten to
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report her to whoever sounds threatening. Oh, and by the way, no matter what
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the school nurse tries to pull, she HAS to let you go home. And if you're
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daring, this line will shut the lady up permanently: if she says what are you
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doing, going home to get out of a test? say this: "No, the Xanex my psychiatrist
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gave me is so strong I can hardly stand up straight..." That will shut the
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bitch up AWFUL quick...and most likely for good!
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That's an excellent bridge into our next aspect of your character: you have to
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always seem on the verge of a nervous breakdown. There are few things in the
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world that could make teachers feel more guilty than causing you a nervous
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breakdown. And don't let them assume that it's family trouble or something like
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that. Be sure they know that your martyrdom is the cause. Strike up one of
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those incessant "transcendental" conversations and tell them: "Between all the
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problems of the school here I lose sleep over, and keeping my own head above the
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water, I always feel like I'm about to go nuts!" Well, you're the pet student,
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so they wouldn't want THAT to happen. Result: they back off...and you get good
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grades for being a martyr. Reason: martyrs are smart! Martyrs see things other
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people don't; therefore they are willing to sacrifice themeselves for those
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things. Act as if you're the only one who sees what a shithole your school is,
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and act as if because you see this you've GOT to change things even if it means
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putting yourself out. The teachers will admire you to DEATH for that... And
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plus, going crazy is also in their minds further confirmation that you are
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smart.
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Also, here's one that never fails: With Arch-Type C's such as English, Art, and
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Philosophy teachers, make it look like the LITERATURE is driving you crazy! Let
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me tell you an example of what I pulled off once:
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The assignment was to read a certain amount of Philosophy and then do a report
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on it. Well, I caught the teacher beforehand and told him that the reading we
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did was so mind-blowing I couldn't even DEAL with it last night, never mind
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doing a report on it. All I could do is go out for a walk and try to grapple
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with it. Result: I got a few extra days to do it and got a better grade than I
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would have. And here is a perfect example of why you have to have them
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CONVINCED that you are smart. If the class clown tried to pull this off, the
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teacher would in so many words tell him to fuck off.
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What will all of these things (the Messiah, Sick, and Crazy characters) also do
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for you? It will convince them that you are not lazy. If they find out that you
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are lazy, you've blown it and you'll have to study for a while to convince them
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differently.
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Now, then. DATELINE: 2.5 MONTHS. They love you. You've earned yourself an
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unprecendented amount of freedom to get away with shit. So use it! Here's
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|
how...
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(All of these tricks and hedges are tried and true and have been tested in the
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field. And
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they work!)
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Problem: Test coming up. You have no idea WHAT the hell is going on.
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Solution: Get the test put off a few days. Approach the teacher outside of
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class and say, "The class picked me to come and speak to you about this test
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coming up. Some of them are worried that we're not going to be ready for it..."
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|
Notice you're placing the blame on everyone else. Your Type-C teacher is far
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|
too tactcful to ever mention the conversation with your classmates, so you're
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|
safe. Be sure to mention a few things that "they" (read `you') are clueless
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|
about. Success rate: putting off a test is a big order, consequently this one
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|
works about 50% of the time, but it's worth the try.
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|
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|
Problem: Teacher collects paper. You didn't do it. Solution: Hand in another
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paper! Strange but true! Chances are they won't notice while they are
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|
collecting it. If they do, you can just act like Einstein in his pajamas and
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"search" like crazy for it through your disorganization. Later, when you have
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the paper done, (the range on this is short, say the next morning)
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|
inconspicuously shove the paper in a pile of the teacher's shit when he ain't
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looking. Better yet, if your teacher has a folder for each class he teacher,
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|
put it in another folder so he later thinks he misplaced it. When the teacher
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|
notices he has a paper for another class, you can just say you handed that paper
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|
in with the other one accidentally. Incidentally, if you get nabbed messing
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|
through the teacher's shit, tell the "truth." Say you noticed that you had
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|
handed in the wrong paper. You were just leaving the real paper for the
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|
teacher. Also, use a sense of urgency by saying "Actually, do you have the
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|
paper I accidentally gave you yesterday? I have to hand that in today!" Adds a
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|
bit of credibility to the story. Also, when you are doing late papers, be SURE
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|
to put the proper date on it! A paper that's 3 weeks late is worthless if you
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|
dated it yesterday. Success rate: 90%
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|
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|
Problem: You have to hand in a large paper, but you're not done with it yet.
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|
Solution: Hand in half the paper! Just stick the second half in with the
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|
teacher's shit later. Chances are, when the teacher gets to yours, he'll go
|
|
looking for the rest of it, and if he finds it, no problem! Be sure in the
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|
second half of your paper to put a staple in the top left hand corner, then pull
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|
it out to make a hole, thereby making it look like the two halves got separated.
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|
Success rate: Has yet to fail.
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|
Problem: Teacher gives an assignment, says "No late papers accepted."
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|
Solution: I have never seen a teacher who threatens "no late papers accepted"
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|
follow through on it. It's a bluff. But anyway, here's what to do. Put the
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|
paper on the floor. Step on it. Crinkle it a bit. Then shove it under the
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|
teacher's desk. He will think he dropped it. Success rate: Has yet to fail.
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|
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|
Excuses: Here are some excuses for not having homework, if your teacher is
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|
inclined to accept them:
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|
Math assignment: "I left it tacked to my bulletin board." This is such a wacky
|
|
yet simple excuse that they will believe it! Most likely they will say "What
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|
the hell did you tack it to your bulletin board for?" and you will have a
|
|
perfect opportunity to construct a wacky story. Remember, the more details you
|
|
give, the more believable the story. And remember, with this, as with ALL
|
|
excuses, DO IT BEFORE SCHOOL. They have something to prove during class time
|
|
and will not let you off the hook then.
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|
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|
Written assignment: "My printer broke. However, I have a copy of it here on
|
|
disk. (hold up floppy) I will give it to you if you like." This is a ballsy
|
|
bluff, and they will NEVER call you on it. Teachers get put off by computers
|
|
more often than not, so they will not only sympathise with you, but they won't
|
|
want to touch your disk. In case they do take it, use a defective one, so if
|
|
they do go and put it in and get "General error reading drive A:" they will feel
|
|
chagrinned as hell and will probably think they wrecked it.
|
|
Success rate: 95% first time, decreases sharply each time you use it.
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|
|
|
Many schools have a time card punch in the front office. Many teachers make use
|
|
of this, saying, "the paper is due at the end of the day, so stamp the paper
|
|
with the time and then put it in my mailbox." This is a gift. Write up a title
|
|
page, stamp the title page, then relax. Take a trip to Disney World. When you
|
|
come back, write the paper, staple it to the stamped title page, and leave it in
|
|
the mailbox of a department chair with a LOT of mail. (Oh, yeah, be sure the
|
|
teacher's name is also on the title page.) Eventually, the department chair
|
|
will forward it to your teacher and say "I don't know how this got in my
|
|
mailbox." If they ask you, shrug and say I gave it to the secretary at the
|
|
front desk. Success rate: Has yet to fail.
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|
|
|
Other hints:
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|
|
|
Fake a nervous breakdown. Go to your teachers for help.
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|
|
|
Make your teachers fight over you. Hell, you're a valuable resource, aren't
|
|
you, being a Messiah for the school. If one teacher gets on your back, complain
|
|
that another teacher is driving you crazy and generally fucking up your life.
|
|
Be gutsy about it. For you to sit and basically call a colleague of theirs a
|
|
jerk is VERY, VERY fulfilling for them. Be harsh. But don't whine. Once in a
|
|
while, hand in a stunning paper. When the teacher comments how wonderful it
|
|
was, don't say "Yes, I tried really hard." Say "Yeah, Mr. So-and-so finally got
|
|
off my back." You've just earned yourself some more freedom...
|
|
|
|
Are you getting the hang of things? Teachers play on a certain level. They love
|
|
to lord over students. You can play on their level, too! They love that,
|
|
really! Eventually, if they catch on to what you are doing, they WON'T EVEN
|
|
CARE! I had one English teacher who had a very strict policy on tardiness of
|
|
assignments. If you handed in things late, you lost credit. Well, I used all
|
|
these tricks on that teacher. I never handed in a paper on time, but I never
|
|
lost credit. Later, a year after I had him, he told me that he knew my tricks
|
|
all along. Well, I was embarassed: BUT HE STILL NEVER TOOK OF CREDIT! So I had
|
|
the last laugh!
|
|
|
|
Treat your teachers like colleagues. Teacher's don't try to fuck over their
|
|
colleagues, so they won't try to fuck you over. Treat them like professionals!
|
|
Take an interest in the politics of the teachers in the school. Most students
|
|
have an "us versus them" view of teachers. What you have to realize is that
|
|
teachers are not a unified front. They sit and argue and bitch and fuck each
|
|
other over as much as students do. A lot of teachers hate each other ardently.
|
|
The difference is, students are open about their squabbles whereas teachers hide
|
|
them to maintain the students' respect for the faculty. So talk to your
|
|
teachers. Find out what's going on. They will confide in you. They will treat
|
|
you like a player.
|
|
|
|
And most importantly: THEY WILL STAY THE FUCK OFFA YOUR BACK!!!
|
|
|
|
Happy hunting!
|
|
|
|
APPENDIX A: WHAT TO DO WHEN YOU'VE SUCCEEDED.
|
|
|
|
You've taken my advice to heart. You're doing shit for work and riding the
|
|
gravy train. Now you've got a lot of free time. So what should you do?
|
|
|
|
- Sleep zzZzzZZZzzzzZzzzZZzz
|
|
|
|
- Peruse the great works of Western Literature
|
|
|
|
- Play practical jokes
|
|
|
|
- Watch a video of Richard Wagner's epic "Der Ring des Nibelungen." At 17 hours,
|
|
it's a great way to kill time and experience a fucking awesome work of art. I
|
|
recommend the Metropolitan Opera production.
|
|
|
|
- Call The Works! (See ad below)
|
|
|
|
- Become a Warez d00d.
|
|
|
|
- Spy on your neighbors.
|
|
|
|
- Watch cartoons.
|
|
|
|
- Crank call your teachers.
|
|
|
|
- Watch Congress on C-SPAN for an entire day. This will PISS YOU OFF!
|
|
|
|
- Hang out with the dregs in Harvard Square. (MA residents only.)
|
|
|
|
- Conduct a fake Gallup poll. Call a random guy, ask him 4 questions about
|
|
politics, then for question 5 ask "Do you douche?"
|
|
|
|
- Visit a tot lot.
|
|
|
|
- Buy some CD's.
|
|
|
|
- Learn German.
|
|
|
|
- Construct an atomic bomb. There are plenty of textfiles to help.
|
|
|
|
- Read some erotic poetry. Suggestion: John Donne
|
|
|
|
- Read some eroric prose. Suggestion: Guy de Maupassant
|
|
|
|
- Read some Nietzsche.
|
|
|
|
- IN OTHER WORDS, EARN YOUR REAL EDUCATION!!!
|
|
|
|
Finis.
|
|
Also sprach Jupiter.
|
|
|
|
A PEREGRINVS IVPITER PRODUCTION (C) 1992 Peregrinus Jupiter.
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