High School Teacher Reacts to Funny Test Answers!

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Mr. Terry History

Mr. Terry History

Күн бұрын

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Don't you hate it when you don't know the answer to a question on a test? What do you do when that's the case? Well these kids use it as a chance to be funny! Mr. Terry is a high school history teacher and reacts to students putting funny answers on their tests!
Original Video: • FUNNIEST KIDS TEST ANS...
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Пікірлер: 592
@MrTerry
@MrTerry Жыл бұрын
What do you think was the most creative answer?
@ColtonRMagby
@ColtonRMagby Жыл бұрын
Yes.
@Sodapop-rd5ku
@Sodapop-rd5ku Жыл бұрын
Yes.
@enjoyedpanda402
@enjoyedpanda402 Жыл бұрын
The boy that wrote all those creative answers on one assignment/piece
@nyeozz
@nyeozz Жыл бұрын
Yes.
@nyeozz
@nyeozz Жыл бұрын
im 96th like
@FewVidsJustComments
@FewVidsJustComments Жыл бұрын
The Cold War started because Russia had adopted communism and became the Soviet Union 30 or so years prior. Then, suddenly in the late 50's, the US decided they didnt like communism, so they stopped being allies with them like they were up till that point, and started being enemies. But, they also knew they couldnt fight physically cuz they both had lotsa nuclear weapons, so they just resorted to hating each other and taking opposite sides on proxy conflits as the world's two major superpowers. TL;DR, it started because the US and Soviet Union's views opposed each other.
@az1202
@az1202 Жыл бұрын
Nice
@richardpike8748
@richardpike8748 Жыл бұрын
bravo, I like it
@emtheslav2295
@emtheslav2295 Жыл бұрын
Noice. Also, if you look at it from the USSR view, it looks like the USA is scare sh*tless of them😂
@weedyeeter940
@weedyeeter940 Жыл бұрын
You got an A, 99 words (Or exactly 100 i cant count)
@FewVidsJustComments
@FewVidsJustComments Жыл бұрын
@@weedyeeter940 I used a word counting site, I was too lazy to count too xD
@RodolfoGaming
@RodolfoGaming Жыл бұрын
11:48 - The cold war started when the axis powers were getting over run by the USSR, China and the west during World War 2 and it was an ideological war between different socioeconomic models where the west's(led by USA, UK, France) capitalism faced the east's (led by USSR and China) comunism and its a war that never took place on any of the great powers' own territory but often being fought in small countries across the world (such as Korea, Vitenam, Afghanistan, etc) as well as in the development of nuclear weapons and exploring space.
@sezcam79
@sezcam79 Жыл бұрын
bravo sir rodolfo
@RodolfoGaming
@RodolfoGaming Жыл бұрын
@@sezcam79 thanks
@CINCYEDITS
@CINCYEDITS Жыл бұрын
Good job 👍
@SherwoodsCrafts
@SherwoodsCrafts Жыл бұрын
As for the last part with all answers being "B", I had a similar experience. I had an online course and the teacher would send us our online tests, but one of the answers (multiple choice) was always in a different font from everything else. I was convinced that this was some sort of "GOTCHA" thing and still looked up the answers. After the 2nd test like this, I just stopped caring and always picked it. I ACED the course.
@JoshuaEisenbart
@JoshuaEisenbart Жыл бұрын
I was taking an online college course, and, despite it being a programming class, the teacher was running into some technical difficulties with the software. Our homework assignments came from the end of some PDF's he'd created himself (since he felt it was unfair to make us buy books, and thought they used way too many words), and usually had 10 multiple choice questions, 5 structured exercises (basically told us how to write a program line-by-line for hands on experience), and 2 free-form programming problems. Unfortunately, when he created the online versions of the assignments, the software was supposed to randomize the order of the answers (so that somebody couldn't just say "1 is b, 2 is d" etc), but for most of the assignments, the correct answer was always "A". This problem was 2 fold: 1st, you were expected to have already answered the questions in the PDF, as the assignment had a time limit, so if you didn't read the answers online, you'd probably assume they were in the same order as the PDF, and 2nd, it became so ridiculously obvious by the end of the assignment that I actually changed my answers on a couple of questions to "A" cause I had gotten them wrong originally. Edit to clarify: No, the teacher did not create the software. It was a website that the entire college used.
@theyregr-r-reat8035
@theyregr-r-reat8035 Жыл бұрын
Awesome! Can't expect that to happen again, but NOIIICE!
@suzannecooke2055
@suzannecooke2055 Жыл бұрын
Once, on a final anthropology exam that was just 3 essay questions,I had no clue about the 3rd question. So I wrote: "I have no idea what this is about, never heard of it, it was not in the reading." And i went on for 3 pages about just BS at the end of which I wrote: "By now you realize this is all bulls**t, but its all I've got." I got a B.
@DracoTheNightFury
@DracoTheNightFury Жыл бұрын
One time when I tried to be funny I wrote on my quiz “This dumbass didn’t study” The result was personal one on one tutoring with my teacher after school to help me make studying more appealing. Mr. Branson literally took time outta his personal life to help me. One guess who’s my favorite 3rd grade teacher at Raymond Elementary School
@mollywantshugs5944
@mollywantshugs5944 Жыл бұрын
2:48 he does have a point. A lot of people who live to be 85+ become so crippled by health problems that they aren’t able to really live anymore, just continue existing. That seems like a pretty miserable existence. Long life sounds like a blessing but can eventually become a curse, especially if you’re just barely alive
@jasonnchuleft894
@jasonnchuleft894 Жыл бұрын
On math tests I regularly got comments like "Correct answer but wrong formula". The reason? The teachers always wanted us to use specific methods and pen down any and every step they thought was “needed” to arrive at the answer. Usually this focused on the last method taught even if it was objectively the most cumbersome means available. In most cases there just wasn't enough time to answer everything in the way whoever made the tests intended. So I just cut corners, used the quickest way to get to an answer and skipped any unnecessary steps. That’s the only way I could save up enough time to double-check the answers I wasn’t sure about. Sadly efficiency counts for nothing at school and thus despite routinely getting all answers right I was still docked points. Pretty much the reason why I hated math back in the day.
@tracefuqua3651
@tracefuqua3651 Жыл бұрын
I had much the same experience throughout grade school. Once I got into my college math course the professor could have given two shits how we got the answer as long as it was correct, thus I ended up with my highest end-of-year grade I’d ever gotten in a math class.
@copocopocopocopo
@copocopocopocopo Жыл бұрын
If I was y'all's teacher ( I teach math as a job), I wouldn't care HOW you got the answer, so long as the work made sense and you got the correct answer. I realize the point of many units is to teach a particular method, but if there's alternative, better techniques to reach the same conclusion, so long as it made sense to me, I'm counting it. Sure, I may need to question the students sometimes, but if it works, it works.
@richardpike8748
@richardpike8748 Жыл бұрын
Aw, sorry to hear that, that's not a good experience. I've had some math teachers who are more lenient about that (they still want enough on the page that they can reasonably follow what you did -- e.g. don't just put the answer and nothing else) but they generally wouldn't dock points like you described. I wish more teachers were okay with it as long as you were using similar-or-better methods to achieve the result. (I don't think teachers should be apathetic to people who are stuck using old methods and don't learn better ones, such as the one they may be teaching at that moment)
@richardpike8748
@richardpike8748 Жыл бұрын
@@tracefuqua3651 Yeah my college math experience was pretty smooth in that regard. However I was pretty slow at things like calculus 1 - usually the time ran out before I got through all of it.
@copocopocopocopo
@copocopocopocopo Жыл бұрын
Funny thing, Jason: A LOT of mathematicians like to cut corners, so I don't blame you. Mathematicians are lazy by nature.
@zach_smith
@zach_smith Жыл бұрын
When you asked about the PEMDAS thing, I learned it was "please excuse my dear Aunt Sally" as a way to remember the order of operations (Parentheses, Exponents, Multiplication, Division, Addition, and Subtraction).
@brothersandsistersofvalhalla
@brothersandsistersofvalhalla Жыл бұрын
That has to be the most southern math phrase I've heard.
@kingofhearts3185
@kingofhearts3185 Жыл бұрын
We call it BEDMAS in Canada, brackets instead of parentheses
@zach_smith
@zach_smith Жыл бұрын
@@brothersandsistersofvalhalla I honestly have no clue where it started, but yeah I can see why it sounds like a southern phrase. Though I'm from Pennsylvania, so I'm from the north
@XzMattyxZ
@XzMattyxZ Жыл бұрын
BIDMAS or BODMAS in the U.K. with the I standing for Indices or O for orders
@Keiji555
@Keiji555 Жыл бұрын
@@kingofhearts3185 PEDMAS in French. Never heard of BEDMAS. And we do call them parentheses rather than brackets. Actually, technically, parentheses (which is used in Canada, rather than Brackets) would be the correct term, as brackets would be more the square shaped brackets. I've heard more parentheses in Canada, rather than Brackets. (Which I've probably heard only on one hand in the past several years, whereas I've heard parentheses numerous times, and I live in English communities in Ontario... Unless it's a big city thing to call them brackets.)
@CaloBrown
@CaloBrown Жыл бұрын
My teacher has done the all B's before in 5th grade, and I remember two things on that day I will *never* forget, one is that I knew the answers and decided it would be funny to spend over and hour "thinking" about them. Two, my best friend (who didn't know the answers by the way) deciding to mark all the answers A just to get it over with, here is the funny part. He normally would only answer B because its the first letter of his name, and he told the teacher sometime before, so the teacher thought to make all the answers B and get him a 100 for his birthday. After class she calls him to her desk, and told him the test was just that and he responded in the funniest way, "if you wanna give me a 100 next time just use cash." 🤣
@marianpetera8436
@marianpetera8436 Жыл бұрын
One time when we had a test on 20th century history & politics, there was a question "Who was the 'Iron Lady' ". I wrote "Ironman's wife and their children were the Iron Maiden." Got a half point for that :)
@cheneethompson5756
@cheneethompson5756 Жыл бұрын
Lol!
@jmurray1110
@jmurray1110 Жыл бұрын
Well it’s probably safer that way She was decisive to say the least
@megatron1717
@megatron1717 Жыл бұрын
Cold war started because of cold weather. Ez question, Mr Terry !!
@marcor815
@marcor815 Жыл бұрын
That‘s only 11 words. He wanted 100 words😉
@megatron1717
@megatron1717 Жыл бұрын
@@marcor815 oh boy, do you really want me to write 100 words?
@marcor815
@marcor815 Жыл бұрын
@@megatron1717 Why not? You had a very interesting start, so I‘d like to read more
@DeerJerky
@DeerJerky Жыл бұрын
​@@marcor815 "the weather was pretty cold, and thus the cold war, otherwise known as the war of cold weather, was only imminent within the next few units of time. You see, the weather was in fact not hot, and thus cold, which is the complete and exact opposite of hot." There's a few more words for you
@kurtpaulsen6579
@kurtpaulsen6579 Жыл бұрын
​​​@@DeerJerkyFurther, the climate shift made for less comfortable conditions without heavier clothing. So in conclusion, a combination of timing and environmental conditions, in conjunction with improper wardrobe selection, began the Cold War.
@sweetrocks610
@sweetrocks610 Жыл бұрын
11:48 The Cold War started as an aftermath of World War II. There was an ideological struggle between the west with capitalism and the east with communism. The most prominent example was in Berlin. West Berlin was prosperous, where East Berlin was a disaster. People would see the prosperous west and think to themselves that maybe communism isn’t so great after all. Many historians believe that the Truman doctrine was the official start of the Cold War, in which Harry Truman basically said “those guys cannot be trusted and communism is evil”. What I described is how the Cold War began. How did I do? Edit: mixed up the 2 Berlin’s.
@nikoahonen7048
@nikoahonen7048 Жыл бұрын
I think you mixed up East Berlin and West Berlin, otherwise pretty good
@sweetrocks610
@sweetrocks610 Жыл бұрын
@@nikoahonen7048 yep lol, that’s what happens when you don’t proofread. Thanks for pointing that out.
@brothersandsistersofvalhalla
@brothersandsistersofvalhalla Жыл бұрын
Did you mean to write prosperous west?
@sweetrocks610
@sweetrocks610 Жыл бұрын
@@brothersandsistersofvalhalla no, I flipped East and west in the unedited comment, saying the west was the prosperous one. The edit was fixing that,
@brothersandsistersofvalhalla
@brothersandsistersofvalhalla Жыл бұрын
@@sweetrocks610 Re-proofread your comment. You still have "prosperous east" in there.
@SaltExarch
@SaltExarch Жыл бұрын
If I was a teacher and I had control of the tests, I would be so evil with the multiple-choice answer mind games. Here are my evil schemes: - A test where every answer is the same - A test where all the answers are the same, except the last one (to trip up anyone who caught on) - A test where all the answers are one letter except for a few questions in the middle of the test, making students second guess themselves even more - A test where the pattern of answers is ABCD over and over again. - A test where the pattern of answers is ABCD over and over again, but starts at C so students who just put "ABCD" repeating from question 1 can't stumble into a perfect score - A test where the first half of the answers are ABCD over and over again, but then the second half is truly random. - A completely normal test, but given after all the above suggestions so the fact that there's no gimmick makes my students second-guess their answers
@secretagentrandybeans364
@secretagentrandybeans364 Жыл бұрын
I graduated last June and on my final math test I got a show your work part and I put "I had a spiritual connection with Mark Knopfler and he told me this is the right answer"
@benmurphy9956
@benmurphy9956 Жыл бұрын
14:15 i think that this student knows their teacher real well
@Stephan-H
@Stephan-H Жыл бұрын
Some teachers/profs at school/university etc seem to love those 2 to 4 pages long questionairs to teach about reading the assignment propperly. As in: "Read the assignment properly to the end. Please only use a blue/black pen to answer. (insert 1-2 more instructions) 1) Please write your name in the top right corner. Then have questions about all kinds of thing with the last being: Please only answer Question 1)" Sadly in many cases the time to read all and also answer all is few and far in between when it come to RL. As for the answers being all the same I would throw in a few other answers to check if people got lazy. Then again here in Germany we rarely to never had multiple choice questions. It was always full sentences, maybe at time a single word.
@lacey9896
@lacey9896 Жыл бұрын
Never had a teacher give all the same letter on a test before. But in college I had a teacher give everyone copies of his grading sheet instead of the test and didn't realize it until halfway through the class. He still gave everyone an A though.
@SpeedyCheetahCub
@SpeedyCheetahCub Жыл бұрын
My sister once gave me a math Kahoot where every answer was red except the last one was blue. I didn't even realize it and I ended up acing the Kahoot. When she asked me how I got around the trap, I was very confused until she explained it to me. Ever since then, I have always decided to ignore patterns like that, because even if it is a real pattern it could be a trick.
@mjd3813
@mjd3813 Жыл бұрын
I had the same thing happen to me with the all “B” scenario for my 8th grade year every class had the same letter answer for both final tests in the quarter. Confused the hell outta everyone. A free the test all the smart kids asked the teachers what happened and they said, “It’s to show you that your test scores do not define how good you are at school. A test is just a test, so stop stressing out over it” they all taught us so much and really helped us all. Needless to say, my school districts graduating class of 2026 will never forget them
@coolrockpuppy101
@coolrockpuppy101 Жыл бұрын
2:55 the detention of PEMDAS is (Parentheses,Exponents,Multiplication,Division,Addition,Subtraction) and is the order by which you solve an equation
@ronaldjames8615
@ronaldjames8615 Жыл бұрын
I remember one of my science teachers in middle school about 10 or so years ago made a test answers all c's. I got full marks while everyone else succumbed to the psychological warfare. I looked him dead in the eye and said I just guessed after the first half
@tfodthogtmfof7644
@tfodthogtmfof7644 Жыл бұрын
See as a teacher I would make a test with the first 60% of the test all answer “B” and then do 20 % With “A” followed by 10% with “C” and final 10% all “D”. Any that succumbed to the temptation of laziness would still fail. However I still feel that is better than my college history professor who would sprinkle nonsense answers through his test but if it was a favorite pet answer of his give double points for his nonsense. An example I still remember was What US figure that later became President rode with the rough riders? A: Quick Draw McGraw B: Theodore Roosevelt C: Hoppity Hooper D: Franklin Roosevelt E: Yosemite Sam. Correct answer was B but answer C got double points because it was the teacher’s favorite cartoon character as a kid.
@wyattgardner3552
@wyattgardner3552 Жыл бұрын
I had a very strict teacher use all B's and third to last question was a C. Super sneaky.
@stuner2440
@stuner2440 Жыл бұрын
13:00 this is pretty much Brazil on 2010. I don’t remember exactly the date but a Brazilian guy made the introduction of an essay and the rest of it was an instant noodles recipe. He passed.
@raeshathemarionette
@raeshathemarionette Жыл бұрын
I remember in math class we had a teacher who was also a special ed teacher and when we did homework, it was pointless because the questions I got wrong were marked right anyways so I guess she was trying to help everyone feel equal but it made no sense why she did that. When seeing that second paragraph that kid did I suddenly remembered that time XD
@IllusioneTempus
@IllusioneTempus Жыл бұрын
15:50 Actually happened to me twice. First one was maths during 10th grade. I was more than confident about my math skills, but the amount of calcs you had to do for one question was so insane to the point that I had no time to do the second half of the test. Then I noticed that the answer sheet I had filled was a perfect line of ABCDE, so with like 30 minutes to spare (out of 2 hours on a 30-question test, yes I took 1.5 hours on 15 questions it was that ridiculous), I took a gamble and just filled the rest of the sheet with ABCDE. Gamble paid off, but the teacher did a sneaky and made the last 10 took an ABCD pattern instead but it was still 24/30 marks which was good enough. Second time was Arabic language class (again for 10th grade). I filled the reading comprehension part since it was the easiest cuz I honestly did not understand anything from class, and some simple vocabulary stuff, and noticed the answers were in an ABCDE format. I just said screw it I ain't figuring out the answers anyway and filled the rest with ABCDE. A bunch of my classmates did the same thing too (yes our Arabic classes were that hard to follow we all just gambled on the oddity we found), and we all walked out with 100s for that Arabic midterm hahaha.
@jeffreyphipps1507
@jeffreyphipps1507 Жыл бұрын
PEMDAS is a pneumonic for the order of operations (which a staggering number of people don't know even in college). It stands for Parentheses, Exponentiation, Multiplication/Division, Arithmetic/Subtraction
@DSzaks
@DSzaks Жыл бұрын
I have had a test where a teacher had all the answers be C. I didn't pick up on it as a gimmick and then just go make all my answers C on the test, instead it made me paranoid that I was doing something wrong and I actually went back and changed some of my answers because I thought for sure they couldn't all be the same choice.
@djjazzyjeff1232
@djjazzyjeff1232 Жыл бұрын
Good on you Mr. Terry on the HelloFresh sponsorship. It's been fun to see this channel turn from a hobby into (what I assume) is a full-blown successful business venture. I am so excited for your success, I just realized It's been YEARS since I've been subbed, things have come a long way, keep up the great work!
@ElizabethTheJedi
@ElizabethTheJedi Жыл бұрын
PEMDAS is the acronym for the order of operations in math (algebra, to be specific). It’s best remembered as the pneumonic device “Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally,” but it actually stands for “Parentheses/Exponents, Multiply/Divide, and Add/Subtract,” the order in which a longer algebraic equation must be completed to find the solution. Source: Took high school-level Algebra I in 8th grade.
@mlee6050
@mlee6050 Жыл бұрын
American version? In UK I know of bodmas which think became bidmas
@Adamthecoolguy123
@Adamthecoolguy123 Жыл бұрын
@@mlee6050 yup it's the American version
@shellytarbet3677
@shellytarbet3677 Жыл бұрын
Cold war is when your mom turns the thermostat above 60 dad gets mad, so mom washed the sheets puts them on their bed wet then she sleeps on the couch.
@zachronspees6432
@zachronspees6432 Жыл бұрын
PEMDAS, aka Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally; that is a way to remember the order of operation in math: parentheses, exponents, multiplication, division, addition & subtraction.
@marcor815
@marcor815 Жыл бұрын
16:20 It really depends on teacher and subject. If you know a teacher likes to play some kind of mind games I would keep it much longer, same goes for subjects conected to psychology or statistics, because there the teacher might want to make you aware of this in a way. But if I have no reason to think it‘s itentional i would start to worry at like 4-6 same answers in a row if it‘s four or more options
@crazyjason9838
@crazyjason9838 Жыл бұрын
I once had a test where the teacher said "read the whole test before you answer any questions". The last question was the only one that counted, and other answers were extra credit. Best score I ever had, and most points I ever got 😄!
@ETHAN-is3li
@ETHAN-is3li Жыл бұрын
(5:11) If I were the teacher, I would give minus points for drawing on the test and mark down “That doesn’t count”. The kid has to earn a complete grade, not just go to great lengths for one.
@brokentboy
@brokentboy Жыл бұрын
My history teacher did the B answer thing. He knew it would screw with everyone. He was a great guy. Even told us how to pass his class with a C in the syllabus. You damn right we shamed anyone that didnt get that C or higher. Since I know someone wants to know how you could get a C it was a few easy assignments. 1) Write no more than a 5 paragraph essay on a subject we cover in the year. 2) Show and tale. Bring in something with a really Rad story. 3) Follow the instructions on the board (He'd tell us write the date as the rest of the word, draw a picture at the bottom of the test, Write about how the new celebrity it couple would break up.) 4) What did Paul Newman kept in his Butt-chin? & 5) Return the syllabus for a "D" grade.
@Name.she-her-hers
@Name.she-her-hers Жыл бұрын
In my DE Government class, our teacher 100% did not care. Every exam/quiz was multiple choice and exactly 90% of questions would be answer choice A. The remaining 10% would be other options. After a while of this, most people would just put A for all answers and then submit the assignments. Doing this did not sit right for me, so I always read every question and put what I thought was the answer (I got a 97% in that class). The only thing the teacher graded properly was these 3 reports we had to do for the course.
@DraconicHero
@DraconicHero Жыл бұрын
i once had a teacher for biology. on the literal first day of the trimester, he gave us a pop quiz. the quiz had a little lore, that it was an alien testing us. but the answers of the quiz had nothing to do with biology but the ability to study a quiz and use patterns and other questions to answer the quiz. Funny enough as nonsense as it was, the patterns i learned from the quiz i had begun to notice in most, if not all quizzes and tests. Even in standardized testing. Like if it's a pop quiz multiple choice (prolly american only}, then the 10th question is prolly "C" cause Ten-Is-C "Tennessee" So a quiz where every answer is the same choice in a multiple choice, could be less about doing it for the lol, but maybe challenge the free creative thinking and test how fast they figure out that every answer is the same.
@TOXICNightmare
@TOXICNightmare Жыл бұрын
2:16 the directions said as SIMPLE or as complicated as you want. He chose the simple one
@zimmygirl777
@zimmygirl777 Жыл бұрын
"Ghosts are not real." Danny (offscreen): Am I a joke to you?😾👻
@Ric_373
@Ric_373 Жыл бұрын
3:43 that teacher needs some love.
@averyrichard5177
@averyrichard5177 Жыл бұрын
12:15 If you had my family's white out brush, you wouldn't think that whiting out anything was lazy. I did it once. Never again!
@devonm042690
@devonm042690 Жыл бұрын
For me, if the first roughly 5 answers on a multiple choice test were the same letter, I'd begin to suspect shenanigans.
@raycrossley5398
@raycrossley5398 Жыл бұрын
Pemdas is the order of operations in math class and the teacher told you the catchy acronym, “PEMDAS” (parenthesis, exponents, multiplication, division, addition, subtraction) to help you remember? Memorable acronyms aren't the only way to memorize concepts.
@MissMulaBaby15
@MissMulaBaby15 Жыл бұрын
The bacon paper is the best!!! Sounds like something I would write!!!
@Jan_Koopman
@Jan_Koopman Жыл бұрын
Napoleon didn't even die in battle, he died in exile, so the question "In which battle did Napoleon die?" is a trick question and even the creative answer: "His last one" is wrong.
@Themineccraftkid
@Themineccraftkid Жыл бұрын
Mr Incredible: “MATH IS MATH!”
@amymarie6809
@amymarie6809 Жыл бұрын
That kid who did the Sir MixAlot should have gotten an A… he has awesome parents!
@presentrama
@presentrama Жыл бұрын
at 11:10, being a history nerd, I would have said something like "At the end of World War 2, the two countries of the U.S.S.R. and the U.S.A., with different ideologies, sparked a hatred between the two. America, a democratic, capitalistic nation, and the U.S.S.R., decided to invade countries to spread these ideologies. America with Cuba and Venezuela, the Soviet Union with Somalia and Nigeria. This started proxy wars supported by each superpower, with the goal to dominate the area and force their ideology on them. On the side, America and the Soviet Union built lots of nuclear weapons, spied on each other to keep tabs on the other's arsenal, and raced to be the first in many achievements regarding space."
@djjazzyjeff1232
@djjazzyjeff1232 Жыл бұрын
10:00 Are we sure the name of the kid at the top of the page wasn't Harley Morenstein (From Epic Meal Time)? Lol.
@audrahartman4212
@audrahartman4212 Жыл бұрын
Very funny and I enjoy your take on these! I agree, if a child is showing thought, then the teacher is doing something right!
@worldwidewells7452
@worldwidewells7452 Жыл бұрын
That Shakespeare q was written like my college prof wrote it, but certainly not graded like he read it. That's all I'll say on it. Also, shoutout to Dr. DiBiase at JSU. Wonderful year.
@narrowgauge0727
@narrowgauge0727 Жыл бұрын
16:07 I know, I hate that. I took the PSAT recently and it really makes me feel like I did something wrong and it freaks me out.
@FunkyMonkey-oj9md
@FunkyMonkey-oj9md Жыл бұрын
You should make a fairly long multiple choice test with every answer being the same but make of them a different letter to see who kept reading and who realized the pattern
@GamingintheAM0801
@GamingintheAM0801 Жыл бұрын
That Disney Princess answer killed me.
@briankemp9000
@briankemp9000 Жыл бұрын
This stuff is funny as heck. I enjoy your stuff while I am at work and can't stop laughing.
@johnvito222
@johnvito222 Жыл бұрын
My history teacher actually gave us a test where D. was the correct choice for every answer. I got a 100 but a few people got a 90 because they were second-guessing themselves because of selecting D. every time.
@fandomsnake
@fandomsnake Жыл бұрын
I'd suggest doing the first half all "B" for example and then change the other half to be another answer. That way you'll know whose actually figuring it out and not thinking every answers going to be the same
@PersonianOld
@PersonianOld Жыл бұрын
You seem like that one teacher everyone loves LOL
@hazardousmatter2
@hazardousmatter2 Жыл бұрын
I've had a few teachers make all questions have the same letter answers, usually on scantrons. Oddly enough, they were all history teachers.
@JoshuaEisenbart
@JoshuaEisenbart Жыл бұрын
Honestly, that kid's answer was on point. The Cold War was caused, in part, by Russia refusing to allow Germany to be reunited after WW2, and, on both sides, an unwillingness to cooperate that lead to political, and eventually military, tension. Both the U.S.A. and U.S.S.R. were just saying "No." to each other.
@Quacks0
@Quacks0 Жыл бұрын
2:43 If this student's treatment in school was anything like mine, I don't blame him for wanting to die rather than go on in his life. How can you have any future aspirations if you're constantly being scolded, ridiculed, criticized, underfed, overworked, etc.?
@Damons-Old-Soul
@Damons-Old-Soul Жыл бұрын
I would guess all the same letter answers, somewhere between ¼ and ½ way through the test. I would probably double check the last few questions to make sure.
@emmasilver2332
@emmasilver2332 Жыл бұрын
I'm tempted to make a test where every answer is B...except the last one which B will be the obvious "I was running out of possible answers so I just typed something random in that spot" answer. Just as a science experiment of how many people will second-guess themselves, how many people will see the pattern and guess that all the answers are B, and how many actually read each test question. To add another variable to the mix, maybe I'll make four different versions of the test and label them with invisible ink, the correct answer being a different letter on each of the four versions. Then I'd each version on the desks in a way that the three desks a student could sneakily cheat off of would be a different version from their own. That way if a person second-guesses themselves and glances at their neighbor's answers they'll be even more confused.
@kyle2931
@kyle2931 8 ай бұрын
Just my luck for my stomach to growl and I can’t do anything about it, lol. I just saw the beginning of this video and seeing the food made my stomach growl because it looked so good. 👍👍I’ve been watching these videos of your reacting to kids comments and a large number of your responses have me cracking up laughing 🤣!!!!!! Keep crushing it.🙂
@tomwester14
@tomwester14 Жыл бұрын
I had a history teacher that would pull questions off of state test and he would always say it was possible to have multiple same letter answers in a row. I remember having like 5 B in a row once.
@Eeveeismypatronas
@Eeveeismypatronas Жыл бұрын
10:58 XD Oh, that answer's my favorite.
@iluvmaifurbabies
@iluvmaifurbabies Жыл бұрын
there was a post on Facebook today it was of an outside drain and it says "when you don't use the same method as the math teacher but you still get the right answer" I commented " we can't use the methods we were taught in school even if we get the right answer because according to teachers today the way we were taught to do math is wrong" I am Gen X so I was in school in the 80's and early 90's
@davarrashayde
@davarrashayde Жыл бұрын
I actually HAD a teacher do the all one choice thing on a multiple choice test, all the answers were C.....i was just going question by question but when i looked at my sheet as i did because i'd always double check my answers if i had time before turning it in i noticed that they were all c...which freaked me out...i was spazzing over it until the bell rang and i HAD to turn it in even though i knew the answers were right my brain was screaming at me that it was wrong because who would do that??? Apparently i was the only one who didnt go back and immediately change their answers...of everyone in that teacher's classes i was the only one who didnt fail because of going back and changing the answers because"it can't all be the same answer on a multiple choice test"...to be honest it still bothers me that i had that happen and it still makes me feel anxious just thinking about it...i was totally stressed all the way til we got our test results...
@jamescheddar4896
@jamescheddar4896 Жыл бұрын
LOL that teacher who wrote the note about the big butts lyrics was a class act. just assumed the student was testing them and was like "yeah don't worry I am reading them" and "strongest force on earth" is a BS question that deserved a joke answer. do they mean the strongest force currently being exerted? strongest force to ever be exerted?
@bretsteinmetz3342
@bretsteinmetz3342 Жыл бұрын
8:48.. it’s one in the morning and I’m a bit loopy, I laughed at this for almost ten minutes straight. Hahah
@naolucillerandom5280
@naolucillerandom5280 Жыл бұрын
I think I would answer honestly and re check over and over before giving it in just to confirm. And maybe I'd change any that weren't the same letter to the same letter last minute just to be sure 😂
@memyselfandi2300
@memyselfandi2300 Жыл бұрын
if you ever want to make every anser on a test the same, you could do it on a 5 question quiz, thats enough questions for students to get nervous but no enough to think you did it on purpose
@shellyboggs9093
@shellyboggs9093 Жыл бұрын
PEMDAS is for Martha rules of order of operation. Parentheses, exponents, multiplication, division, addition and subtraction
@crimsonking2874
@crimsonking2874 Жыл бұрын
It’s so sad I would not have been able to answer all those questions 9:24. My grammar and English is so bad 😅
@limegrass6194
@limegrass6194 Жыл бұрын
When i was in elementary school, when I saw a bunch of the same letter answers in a row, I would do the opposite of what other people would do and just fill in the next few with the same answer. I did not have good reasoning skills back then.
@scottybbadd
@scottybbadd Жыл бұрын
There was a writing assignment on a major test. We had a practice one. It was a form of writing that I wasn't good at and didn't like. I didn't write the way the wanted it written. When, it was time to do it was something I wrote well, and in the form of a letter to the editor. I could throw their form of writing out the window, and I nailed it.
@bleeduntildeath
@bleeduntildeath Жыл бұрын
I used to "use the wrong formula" in math because I just didn't show all the work, sometimes teachers hated this, but I hate clutter on my paper
@disableddragonborn
@disableddragonborn Жыл бұрын
In school, the one thing I remember learning about math is if it has =, it is an equation, so that first one is great and technically the teacher couldn't mark it wrong.
@abnormTrueCrime
@abnormTrueCrime Жыл бұрын
I love this format :D
@robertbodell55
@robertbodell55 Жыл бұрын
5:42 what sort of question is what battle did Napoleon die in he didn't die in battle he died exiled on St Helena unless that was suppose to be a trick question.
@ImaBlack1969
@ImaBlack1969 Жыл бұрын
What would be cruel is to make all the answers, with the exception of one of them, the same letter. At least you would know if your students were actually paying attention to the test. Lol
@flanker_yt4516
@flanker_yt4516 Жыл бұрын
Im going to try this on my quiz to see on how this works
@timothyroop2942
@timothyroop2942 11 ай бұрын
PEMDAS is the mathematical order of operations. Parentheses, exponents, multiplication, division, addition, subtraction. As someone who originally set-out to be a math teacher, "please excuse my dope ass swag" would have gotten half-credit for the humor.
@ayushpandey6851
@ayushpandey6851 8 ай бұрын
The one in the foreign script (Hindi; script Devnagri) is: Question: How big of a hand did Gandhi Ji have in the independence of India? (How big of a role did Gandhi play in Indian independence?) Kid: **drew a hand** This big.
@timothyhall7433
@timothyhall7433 Жыл бұрын
The Cold War originates from a long standing distrust between the rest of the Western world and the newly formed USSR. In 1918, the Western allies invaded Russia at Archangel in an attempt to open up a second front with Germany. The allied forces continued hostilities until 1919(after the end of World War One). This lead to a period of mistrust between the USSR and the West until World War Two when the West and the East banded to together to fight a mutual enemy. After the tension snapped creating what is known as the Cold War.
@TheBeastCH
@TheBeastCH Жыл бұрын
When I was a kid, I had several questions, like 4 or 5, in a row with the exact same answer. Just the last one had a different one.
@CT-3743_DeadEye
@CT-3743_DeadEye Жыл бұрын
Since no one seems to talk about it I just want to mention that Napoleon died at the age of 51 on the island of Saint Helena. He didn't die in battle like that question suggested. He officially died of stomach cancer (unofficially he was probably poisoned).
@Mercure250
@Mercure250 Жыл бұрын
5:30 The funny thing about this one is the fact the first answer is wrong.
@psnb1069
@psnb1069 Жыл бұрын
15:42 I’ve been there when I was in 1st grade. I’ve got confused at question 4 thinking that they can’t all be option B
@rosedarkness3860
@rosedarkness3860 Жыл бұрын
I passed college Macroeconomics by drawing silly interpretations for extra credit on answers I didn’t know. 10/10 that man was an absolute G
@ArmyGaurdDog
@ArmyGaurdDog Жыл бұрын
The cold war in a single sentence. After WWII until the Soviet Union broke apart, they had a pissing contest with the U.S. to see who was better.
@cati_TM
@cati_TM Жыл бұрын
We once had a kahoot in my class where every answer exept for a few was red. So me and my mate was getting full 1000 point rounds.
@curtthegamer934
@curtthegamer934 8 ай бұрын
PEMDAS is the order of operations: Parenthesis, Exponenets, Multiplication/Division, Addition/Subtraction
@lazitazi5645
@lazitazi5645 Жыл бұрын
PEMDAS is Parentheses, Exponent, Multiplication, Division, Addition, Subtraction
@sirkredrum3406
@sirkredrum3406 Жыл бұрын
15:06 you didn't read the last line, it says "I can pee." Which is the reason for the sticky note.
@rvmaika5815
@rvmaika5815 Жыл бұрын
The “wrong formula right answer” literally happened to me on a calculus test once
@olyastarobinsky5871
@olyastarobinsky5871 7 ай бұрын
2:53 PEMDAS means “Parentheses, Exponentiation, Multiplication, Division, Addition,Subtraction”
@Mewse1203
@Mewse1203 Жыл бұрын
That 3/10 for "10 words" assignment is a travesty of justice
@bretsteinmetz3342
@bretsteinmetz3342 Жыл бұрын
16:10… I once had an exam in college on a multiple column scan-torn where each column’s answers were all the same, first column, all A, second, all Bs etc… and I didn’t notice what he had done until AFTER I had gotten the test back. Still got a 95 on it lol.
@mikeroconsole
@mikeroconsole Жыл бұрын
PEMDAS is the order of operations in math (at least in America). It shows which problem you should do first. It stands for Parentheses, Exponents, Multiplication, Division, Addition, and Subtraction. To answer your question, Mr. Terry.
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