I like the good old
Dijaaveagooweegend? - did you have a good week end
The faster you say it the better.
I like the good old
We usually reserve our run on words for when we are excited.
Don’t you mean “Ooh, Them’s good!”?The4thEstate wrote: ↑Mon May 13, 2019 12:23 amYou hear some strange contractions in Indiana, too.
For instance:
"Where'd you get that?"
(Pointing) "Back'air."
Not to mention interesting pronouns:
"Ooh, them are good!"
The4thEstate wrote: ↑Mon May 13, 2019 12:23 amYou hear some strange contractions in Indiana, too.
For instance:
"Where'd you get that?"
(Pointing) "Back'air."
Not to mention interesting pronouns:
"Ooh, them are good!"
Well, there's probably more of that! One of my friends, however, tended to used the more grammatically correct "are" with the plural "them."
Then there was this politically correct chapter title from the Journal of Curriculum and Teaching:
This is a long-winded way of saying, "When black kids get an answer wrong, it isn't necessarily wrong. They just tend to approximate more than their classmates."Many African American Students Tend to Approximate Space, Number, and Time Rather than Stick to Accuracy.
Generally in the United States, promptness and accuracy are expected. However, in studying mathematics,
approximations can be just as important as accuracy. Children, in the past and now, are convinced in school that
mathematics is the study of the precise and that only one correct answer and only one correct algorithm are possible.
The National Council of Teachers of Mathematics recommends in the Curriculum and Evaluation Standards for
School Mathematics (1989: 37) that children investigate and understand when it is appropriate to estimate and when
it is appropriate to calculate an exact answer. If indeed many African American students tend to approximate space,
number, and time, teachers need to recognize this approach as an asset, not a deficit. Helping all students recognize
that both approximations and precise answers are appropriate depending on the given situation is of utmost
importance.
Never saw that movie. But anyone looking to study hillbilly vernacular (and mating habits) should rent "Deliverance."
Never seen the movie "The Dish" have you, 4E? Nor read anything about how they got Apollo 13 back from the moon after their accident. In both cases ("The Dish" cover Australia's contribution to Apollo 11) approximation was good enough to find Apollo 11 after it was "lost" by the Parkes Radio Telescope and to get Apollo 13 back to Earth. I'd recommend you watch both movies, you might find them educational...The4thEstate wrote: ↑Tue May 21, 2019 9:10 pm
The 50th anniversary of the first moon landing is coming up in July. Can you imagine the head of NASA Mission Control telling his staff, "When calculating how to get the crew back to Earth, both approximations and precise answers are appropriate!"
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