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There has always been some cheating on tests.
Maybe you hung out with a different crowd than I did. � I hang out in the real world. Some people do cheat. Yes, they do. However it's one thing to know that cheating exists as a general rule, and a very different thing to cite specific instances of cheating. How much actual cheating on the ham license tests went on back in the pre-VE days? How much actually goes on today? I don't think anybody really knows. I do know this, however: (in this discussion, the "Conditional distance" is how far from an FCC quarterly exam point you had to live in order to get a license by mail. Distances cited are "air-line" distances, not driving distances) Before about 1954, the "Conditional distance" was 125 miles, and FCC gave Novice and Tech exams at their offices. Plus if you had a by-mail license and moved to within the "Conditional distance", you had to retest in front of an FCC examiner within 90 days or lose the license. Then for about ten years the "Conditional distance" was only 75 miles and the retest-if-you-move requirement went away. FCC also made all routine Novice and Tech licenses by-mail, regardless of distance. A considerable amount of CONUS was thus Conditional country. About 1964 the FCC increased the Conditional distance to 175 miles and increased the number of exam points. Almost none of CONUS was Conditional country after that change. You are correct that "weeder" tests can't be 100% effective. �But if you think that they don't have an impact, then why test at all? Weeder tests keep failures out for *no reason*. Relevant tests keep failures out for a *good reason*. A weeder test can be relevant. And given the number of amateurs actually using Morse Code on the air, it's a relevant test for an amateur radio license. Although Psychology is a fascinating study, there are aspects... I was being funny with the psychology testing thing. I didn't think you'd really take me seriously. In a way, a big part of the testing is psychological. If we could trust everyone to learn the technology, operating practices, rules and regs as needed, there'd be no need for a test. By testing, we make people prove they actually learned a few things, even though the testing is far from comprehensive and doesn't test if the person understands the material. But having observed what happens when people are trusted to learn on their own, (cb as one example), testing seems to be a good idea. 73 de Jim, N2EY Psychology has to do with everything pertaining to human behavior. Back in my creative writing days, I wrote a research paper on peasant rebellions at the height of the Rodney King beating riots. In a study of numerous uprisings, rebellions, disturbances and other civil unrest in old times, the conclusion was that the masses indeed require authority and pressure in order to avoid self-destruction. It was found time and again, that these disturbances were most often due to issues of poor morale reinforced within the affected group rather than a righteous rising up against persecution, exploitation or to redress some wrong. Most often the victims were random targets of widespread violent outbursts during these disturbances rather than any defined enemy. Essentially, the Devil has his day. This mentality also carries over to individuals, where perceived pressure or persecution results in school shootings and things like that, where the self-destructive urge is externalized to random targets, or targets of opportunity, rather than a defined enemy. So I suspect this is known to others who can incite such behavior simply by fomenting dissension or planting seeds of discontent, then backing off to watch the outcome in complete safety, thus using crowd and individual Psychology to promote terrorism and destruction as a means to some end. The whole problem with instituting and maintaining authority though, it how to keep it on the righteous path. In the final analysis, God is the only hope, but only if we spread the word. |
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