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Old January 29th 07, 11:17 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.policy
Bob Brock Bob Brock is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jan 2007
Posts: 53
Default Those Old Study Guides

On Mon, 29 Jan 2007 14:04:35 -0500, wrote:

On Mon, 29 Jan 2007 00:21:23 -0500, "Bob Brock"
wrote:


wrote in message
groups.com...
Bob Brock wrote:
wrote in message
ups.com...
Mike Coslo wrote:
wrote in
ups.com:


Want to see a summary of the old study guides, and some sample
questions? I'll post them if you are interested.

Always am.

Here's a sample - lots more to come.

From the 1976 ARRL License Manual:

Study Question #31:

Well, I can see why those types of questions are no longer being used.
It's
more about who is giving the tests than it is about who is taking it.

Every tried grading essay questions?

Yes - but you missed the point, Bob.

In 1976 the tests were all multiple-choice, same as today, except that
most of them were 5 choices rather than 4.

But the FCC-provided *study guides* were in essay format, as given
above. The exact Q&A were not publicly available - at least not
officially.


And this benefited the ARS in which way. If someone knows the task...they
know the task. To be honest with you, I've known some CB'ers who knew as
much or more about radio than ham's. However, I've not known any CB'ers
since about 1974 or so.


again he all but says that the exact pool was avable in point of fact
just through offical sources

how indeed does benifit the ARS or the Public that SOME folks did have
an unofficail leg up and some folks did not?

http://kb9rqz.blogspot.com/


Since you're replying to my post, let me make it emphatically clear
that I advocate publishing the questions and the answers as long as
the questions are all encompassing of what a ham needs to know.