Aww, jeez. Not another rant about how much better previous generations did things.
Aww, jeez. Not another rant about how much better previous generations did things.
Relax... I'll need some information first. Just the basic facts - can you show me where it hurts?
2+2=4
check that edge motha ****er!
"What you really fear is inside yourself. You fear your own power.
You fear your own anger, the drive to do great and terrible things."
The Warmonger
People don't join MENSA to win some kind of pissing contest. It is a social gathering. I'm not even a member; I just go to their parties occasionally. The point is not to have a fancy title to boost your ego, but rather to find a wide variety of people who can hold interesting conversations on a wide variety of topics. I find it very difficult to meet people who can speak on my level on things I'm interested in, but at a MENSA gathering it's much easier.
It really is a good meeting place. That's where my parents met, anyways, and many other MENSA members find their future wife or husband there.
You know all of a sudden this thread is more enjoyable.
Completely baffled by a backward indication
That an inspired word will come across your tongue
Hands moving upward to propel the situation
Have simply halted
And now the conversation's done
I am the EgGmAn
I love to go to the U.S. I met my first proper American person on my flight to Tokyo. He was the manager of some band popular in the U.S apparently, Rockafella or something? Pop rock he said. But yeah, the NY accent is pretty "neat".
Live together. Die alone - [url]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lvi_RCM3FAM[/url]
I have a MENSA card. I find the entire thing amusing. Sometimes I pull it out if I'm having an argument and slam it down on the table. Particularly when I'm about to make a claim I know is wholly lacking in reason. "**** you! MENSA says I'm right, bitch."
God, so atrocious in the Old Testament, so attractive in the New--the Jekyl and Hyde of sacred romance.
-Mark Twain
If people are good only because they fear punishment and hope for reward, then we are a sorry lot indeed.
-Albert Einstein
Second thoughts can generally be amended with judicious action; injudicious actions can seldom be recovered with second thoughts.
--Cyteen by C.J.Cherryh
Second thoughts can generally be amended with judicious action; injudicious actions can seldom be recovered with second thoughts.
--Cyteen by C.J.Cherryh
...and I might add, when parents are honest with their children--when society is honest with children and adults--about their capacity and about their success/failures, then individuals *learn* how to be honest with themselves. Being self-critical is very important. Knowing what is truly excellent and knowing where one really falls on the measuring rod of life...that is very important because external critics (mommy and daddy or government) are not always there to say "You are good, Johnny" or "You need to improve Johnny." Knowing where you are in the greater scheme of things provides for greater security for an individual. At the moment, we have a bunch of Prozac popping children (and adults) who are totally insecure and have not understanding of why or where they should next head to become better individuals. And they feel stressed and insecure but when they look around for someone to say that they need to move in this direction or that direction in life...well, there's just a bunch of smiling self-help gurus, teachers, psychologists, helicopter parents who say, "There's nothing wrong with you...it is just your environment that is bad and needs fixing."
Beyond honesty, learning self-motivation is critical, again for the same reasons as above. What happens in schools today? Middle school and high school and university level children are given small weekly assignments, given inflated grades, and often minimal effort exams so as to take the pressure off of actually having to know a body of literature or facts or whatever. Yes, too much to know the whole...a quick glossing over of the small parts is certainly enough. No delayed reward in that...small rewards meted out over the weeks to that "Sally" or "Billy" can go out of Friday night knowing that they got a A for the week. Reinforcing their parents constant refrain "You are a genius!"
That is why I do the opposite as a teacher. No weekly assignments. Two big tests and one big paper and no practice exams or rough draft editing. Get it right the first time, Billy or Sally!! And, I'm a total social Darwinist about it. I want to succeed but if they don't...well, perhaps that is the proper signal that should be sent to them. There is a measuring rod in life and they didn't measure up. On the other hand, if they really want to learn, then I am there to offer further lessons and facts for their eager minds.
... you can't register a 2-year-old for MENSA. 2-year-olds can't take standardized tests.
Ok,you made me do it :/
http://abcnews.go.com/video/playerIndex?id=7477763
Ok,now you can say I was right![]()
I wazzzz here![]()
[url=http://mensa.org.au/?q=faq/children]Children | Australian Mensa[/url]What has Mensa to do with children? Mensa can help gifted children a lot. Mensa is a social club whose sole purpose is to provide a venue for the enjoyment and social contact of its members, and gifted children very badly need opportunities to interact socially with other children like themselves. Ideally, Mensa would be the best possible social group for gifted children to grow up in, bridging from school and even pre-school, through to adulthood.