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On Oct 17, 2:51?am, Phil Kane wrote:
On Sun, 14 Oct 2007 10:14:05 EDT, wrote: What was intimidating was the fact that the Examiner was The Man From FCC, who had sole power to say "You passed" or "You failed". It was the applicant who determined if the result was passing or failing. The examiner merely reported the results. Bwaahaaahaaa! I walked right into that one, Phil! However, didn't the examiner have to use at least some judgement as to whether an applicant's Morse Code copy was 'legible', and whether his/ her sending was OK? Going back before my time, when the exams involved writing essays, drawing diagrams and showing how an answer was derived, didn't the examiner have some judgement as to whether the applicant had properly answered a question? -- The way I recall it, the examiner I met wasn't so much trying to intimidate as to simply let you know that this licensing stuff was serious business. -- One more story: In those days (1967-1970) the written exam questions came in a booklet and there was a separate answer sheet for your answers. They made a big deal about having two #2 pencils, filling in the little box completely, erasing completely, not making stray marks on the paper, do not bend, fold, spindle or mutilate, etc. I'd had similar standardized tests several times in school, and there was always an air of mystery about how the tests were graded. It was implied that they were fed into a computer that had a no tolerance for those who didn't follow instructions. Being a curious sort, I asked how the machine worked, but got no information. Top secret? It seemed to me there were two possibilities: either there was some form of photoelectric system that shone a light through the paper, or there was a grid of contacts (gold plated?) that detected the answers by the conductivity of the graphite pencil marks. The photoelectric system seemed more workable, but the grid-of- contacts system explained the insistence on #2 pencils. When I went to take the test at the FCC office, I thought I might get a glimpse of the grading machine. But there was nothing that looked like such a device in the exam room. When I handed in my completed written test, the examiner's assistant pulled out what looked to me like a manila file folder. She opened it up and slid the answer sheet inside - behind a piece of paper with holes punched in it. She counted up the holes with marked boxes behind them, then pulled out the answer sheet and looked for any questions with more than one box filled in. Whole operation took very little time. She said "You passed" and that was it. What a letdown! No fancy machine, no photocells or gold-plated contacts, no computer, just some pieces of paper with holes in the right spots. I got the distinct impression that I'd seen something I wasn't supposed to reveal to others. The phrase "pay no attention to the man behind the curtain" took on a whole new meaning that day. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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