All I see is the "my son is a good boy and didn't cheat or do anything bad!!!1!!" message from Daddy Dearest. Copying somebody else's paper IS cheating and the student did that plain and simple and ought to be punished for it. I don't believe Daddy Dearest has much ground on suing because of the pledge. The pledge CLEARLY stated that any incidents of cheating will result in punishment, which the mother and student both signed, which indicates that they understood and agree to abide by those terms.
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Sophomore kicked out of honors class for cheating
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Originally posted by jackfaire View PostIn my school AP classes were the honors classes. I don't know what other kind of class would be honors classes.Violence has resolved more conflicts than anything else. The contrary opinion that violence doesn't solve anything is merely wishful thinking at its worst. - Starship Troopers
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Originally posted by Slytovhand View PostCymberleah - why would you care if an engineer cheated on chemistry??? I don't see the direct relevance there...
While the fields of engineering and chemistry are not entirely synonymous, an engineer lacking a basic grasp of reactions and compositions of materials is one who is willing to gamble that what he makes is safe. And that leads to collapsing bridges (or hotels, or...) when the bolts break through, due to using fasteners and girders that don't play well together.
I'm not saying you need to be a chemist to be an engineer, but you really ought to know a little about chemistry. That way, when the time comes you know when to ask a question instead of not even knowing that the question exists.
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Originally posted by Cymberleah View PostI work in a field related to manufacturing. Unless you're building things made of just steel, you need to know about how materials react to each other (like aluminum + stainless steel = almost instant galling, for example), how they age in certain types of weather, things of that nature. If your engineer doesn't know how to work with substances throughout their life spans then he's going to be making things that are much more prone to catastrophic failures.
While the fields of engineering and chemistry are not entirely synonymous, an engineer lacking a basic grasp of reactions and compositions of materials is one who is willing to gamble that what he makes is safe. And that leads to collapsing bridges (or hotels, or...) when the bolts break through, due to using fasteners and girders that don't play well together.
I'm not saying you need to be a chemist to be an engineer, but you really ought to know a little about chemistry. That way, when the time comes you know when to ask a question instead of not even knowing that the question exists.
Now, an engineer who had to cheat on physics modules, I'd be more concerned about!!!ZOE: Preacher, don't the Bible got some pretty specific things to say about killing?
SHEPHERD BOOK: Quite specific. It is, however, Somewhat fuzzier on the subject of kneecaps.
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