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sharkjacobstoday at 7:00 PM2 repliesview on HN

> The students remain motivated to learn how to solve problems without AI because they know they will be evaluated without it in class later.

Learning how to prepare for in-class tests and writing exercises is a very particular skillset which I haven't really exercised a lot since I graduated.

Never mind teaching the humanities, for which I think this is a genuine crisis, in class programming exams are basically the same thing as leetcode job interviews, and we all know what a bad proxy those are for "real" development work.


Replies

yannyutoday at 7:54 PM

> in class programming exams are basically the same thing as leetcode job interviews, and we all know what a bad proxy those are for "real" development work.

Confusing university learning for "real industry work" is a mistake and we've known it's a mistake for a while. We can have classes which teach what life in industry is like, but assuming that the role of university is to teach people how to fit directly into industry is mistaking the purpose of university and K-12 education as a whole.

Writing long-form prose and essays isn't something I've done in a long time, but I wouldn't say it was wasted effort. Long-form prose forces you to do things that you don't always do when writing emails and powerpoints, and I rely on those skills every day.

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iterateoftentoday at 7:12 PM

I use it every day.

Preparing for a test requires understanding what the instructor wants. concentrate on the wrong thing get marked down.

Same applies to working in a corporation. You need to understand what management wants. It’s a core requirement.