VixTD, on 2015-May-18, 12:08, said:
Do you mean you would give the benefit of the doubt to an arts student is unlikely to be in a position to kill someone through incompetence (except perhaps by mistranslating a crucial text), but you wouldn't to a lawyer, an engineer or a medical student?
It happens all the time. I don't know what you are lecturing, but I am a chemical engineer. Throughout my life, as a high school student, a university student, as a grad student and when working at the university, I have seen situations where due to unforeseen circumstances tests could not be completed.
If you would have to fail each university student who couldn't complete a lab, then only very few, very lucky ones (as in: "not necessarily good, just lucky") would graduate with an engineering degree.
Take a typical engineering lab. It is full of equipment kindly donated by industry (read: "old junk that might still be used for teaching purposes"). The lab course is given once a year or once every two years. (These labs are expensive to run.) The students are divided into groups. Each group will run each piece of equipment in a rotation, similar to a bridge movement... or so is the plan. Because on day three, invariably one of these things will break. That happens with old equipment. This means that only two groups could run the equipment according to plan. The other 13 groups can't.
Do you mean that now only those first two groups get to pass the lab course because only they have been working the complete planned program? And the others have to wait two years when the lab runs the next time? In the next term, these same students go through the analytical chemistry lab. On day four, there is a short-circuit in the IR spectrometer. 12 out of the 15 groups cannot do their IR testing. "Sorry guys, see you next year"?
That would not be the engineering approach. The standard solution is that the students who can't use the equipment copy the data from one of the groups that could use it. And the teacher will make sure that the data is good. Then every group produces their own report on all the pieces of equipment, including the one that they never saw.
That means that those students will never turn any valves or pull any levers on the broken piece of equipment. They do not need to think which gauge to read at what particular point in time. And they do not need to make any decisions on what to do (which valve to turn or what lever to pull) with those readings. They will get good data for free.
In addition, when grading the report the lecturer will typically keep in mind that the students haven't seen the equipment when it was running. Mistakes in the report that are caused by this, will be corrected (so that the students will learn that it doesn't work like that) but also forgiven.
I would call that "getting the benefit of the doubt".
Rik
P.S. Engineers don't get actual specific industrial equipment training at a university. Operators who run equipment will have learned that on the job (i.e. in industry). They will be trained (and certified) for that specific piece of equipment by someone who knows that specific piece of equipment. University engineers typically do not operate or handle industrial equipment. They do not turn valves or pull levers in a plant. It would be one of the faster ways to blow up the place.
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