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Re: Help with my Latin
- Subject: Re: Help with my Latin
- From: Katarin Jurich <kjurich@STOCKTON.K12.CA.US>
- Date: Fri, 16 Jun 2000 13:46:02 -0700
- Organization: stockton.k12.ca.us
- Reply-to: Assessment Reform Network Mailing List <ARN-L@LISTS.CUA.EDU>
- Sender: Assessment Reform Network Mailing List <ARN-L@LISTS.CUA.EDU>
Having repressed all my Latin, someone will have to translate my suggestion: "I
think therefore I am not testable".
Patricia Hills & Kevin Whitfield wrote:
> My Latin is a bit rusty, but here goes:
>
> 1. Exertus comes from exsero, to thrust out, e.g. a tongue. Perhaps you mean
> exercitus from exerceo. In the past participle it can mean harassed, vexed.
> So then, perhaps: exercitus sum (not est because we are modeling this on
> Cogito ergo sum). But we still need to get testing in. We could be sly and
> use quaestio -- question under torture: "quaestione exercitus sum. ergo
> vomito" (vomo is more usual, but the more recognizable vomito will do here,
> I think). Unfortunately the simplicity of cogito ergo sum is lost. And
> quaestio requires a bit of erudition.
>
> 2. Let's try something simpler: MCAS oppressus sum ergo vomito - I've been
> oppressed by MCAS therefore I vomit.
>
> 3. Or in the present tense MCAS opprimor. ergo vomito. I'm being oppressed
> by MCAS therefore I vomit. Here we lose the more recognizable "oppressus".
>
> But we're still too far from Descartes elegant three words.
>
> Well then I have to give up now, and, frankly, I urge you to abandon this
> project. My issue is with the use of vomito (or vomo), which takes away from
> the fact that MCAS is, without any doubt, a deadly serious attack on
> students, one which is already inflicting serious harm (e.g., on SPED
> students, and on minority and working class students, who have never been
> given a fair chance to learn). I can understand wanting to put a humorous
> spin on the tests as a way of protecting the kids from the seriousness of it
> all, but it won't work. They are the targets (along with their teachers, of
> course) of a determined, nationwide campaign to destroy public education.
> This campaign is not going to go away. The best we can do for our young
> people is to show them that we're mobilized and ready to do whatever it
> takes to turn back this attack on our schools and that they are part of this
> movement.
>
> Good luck.
>
> Kevin Whitfield
> whitfield_hills@mediaone.net
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Flanigan, Allen <Allen.Flanigan@USPTO.GOV>
> To: <ARN-L@listsrva.cua.edu>
> Sent: Thursday, June 15, 2000 10:33 PM
> Subject: Help with my Latin
>
> | I have been kicking around a slogan which might be suitable for t-shirts
> for
> | certain test-averse children, and naturally thought of Latin. How's my
> | translation?
> |
> | Exertus Est, ergo Vomito (I am tested, therefore I vomit).
> |
> | Maybe we could even do a little picture of a bubble sheet covered with a
> | fresh eruption. It would definitely sell to 6th grade boys, anyway,
> | wouldn't it?
> |
> | (many thanks Susan O for that story in the Sacramento Bee quoting Bob
> | Rayborn of Harcourt, and of course to Mr. Rayborn, the consummate
> | professional: "I've seen where kids have thrown up on the test. Kids do
> get
> | sick . . . The appropriate way to deal with that would be to put [the
> test]
> | in a plastic bag." )
> |
> | Allen F.
> |
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