Difficult tasks [Off Topic]
Dear all,
I want to share with you a little story told by one of my friends, professor of chemical engineering. In a decisive examinination for a group of students (between grades 4 and 5, where 1 is best and 5 worst) amongst others they were free to select from two excercises.
My friend was somewhat frustrated about nobody selecting the second one. The next week he presented it in a noncompetitive way to his students with a grade 1 or 2 only. He stated that the outcome wouldn’t influence their grade – it was just to satisfy his curiosity. All of his students succeeded, but also
I want to share with you a little story told by one of my friends, professor of chemical engineering. In a decisive examinination for a group of students (between grades 4 and 5, where 1 is best and 5 worst) amongst others they were free to select from two excercises.
- Dealing with the chloralkali process. They had a similar exercise in a previous exam, and the topic was exhaustively covered in their tuition. But: It’s a tricky task; you have to set up the chemical equations, get the stoichiometric conversion of masses and volumes to moles right, and solve a system of a quadratic equations. Twenty minutes of work minimum and a lot of space for mistakes.
![[image]](img/uploaded/image57.png)
- The other one needed some creativity. You have a pipe and open it to superheated steam. Given:
l0 = 1.5 m
What’s the change in length?
∆T = 250 ℃
linear thermal expansion coefficient α = 0.00012 in/(ft·℃)
∆l = l0·α·∆T
1 ft = 12 in
Obviously 1 in = 1/12 ft, 0.00012 in/(12 in·℃) = 0.00001/℃ and therefore, ∆l = 1.5 m × 250℃× 0.00001/℃= 1.5 m × 2.5 × 0.001 = 0.00375 m or 3.75 mm. Took me five seconds to come up with the answer…
My friend was somewhat frustrated about nobody selecting the second one. The next week he presented it in a noncompetitive way to his students with a grade 1 or 2 only. He stated that the outcome wouldn’t influence their grade – it was just to satisfy his curiosity. All of his students succeeded, but also
- all of them needed a pocket calculator,
- all of them made at least (!) one unit conversion, and
- nobody recognized the possible shortening of the fraction.
—
Dif-tor heh smusma 🖖🏼 Довге життя Україна!![[image]](https://static.bebac.at/pics/Blue_and_yellow_ribbon_UA.png)
Helmut Schütz
![[image]](https://static.bebac.at/img/CC by.png)
The quality of responses received is directly proportional to the quality of the question asked. 🚮
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Dif-tor heh smusma 🖖🏼 Довге життя Україна!
![[image]](https://static.bebac.at/pics/Blue_and_yellow_ribbon_UA.png)
Helmut Schütz
![[image]](https://static.bebac.at/img/CC by.png)
The quality of responses received is directly proportional to the quality of the question asked. 🚮
Science Quotes
Complete thread:
- Difficult tasksHelmut 2010-10-11 18:51
- an austrian's thoughts ElMaestro 2010-10-11 22:17
- A pirate's poem Jaime_R 2010-10-12 14:00
- Poetry of the finest d_labes 2010-10-12 15:04
- an austrian's thoughts Helmut 2010-10-12 19:25
- Difficult tasks d_labes 2010-10-12 15:20
- Difficult tasks Helmut 2010-10-12 15:31
- Austrian wisdom d_labes 2010-10-12 16:29
- Austrian wisdom Helmut 2010-10-12 19:21
- Austrian wisdom d_labes 2010-10-12 16:29
- Difficult tasks Helmut 2010-10-12 15:31
- an austrian's thoughts ElMaestro 2010-10-11 22:17
