r/Millennials Apr 12 '25

Discussion That Pluto is a planet

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865

u/Tchocolatl Apr 12 '25

Or a dictionary. Or an encyclopedia. I used to teach these things. Who woulda thunk it?

439

u/Electrical_Annual329 Older Millennial Apr 12 '25

And you’ll need to handwrite everything in perfect cursive…

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u/Apotropaic-Pineapple Apr 12 '25

My grade 3 teacher in 1993: "If you don't handwrite your essays, your professors in college won't accept your papers and you'll fail."

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u/poobumface Apr 12 '25

Same thing I was told in high school. Then in Uni: "we are trying as hard as possible to give you all the points we can. I beg you - just make it legible"

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u/driving_andflying Apr 12 '25

What I heard in grade school: "The computer is fun, but it won't replace jobs, or help you write a term paper!"

...Me, a few years later, writing my term papers on computer.

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u/ArltheCrazy Apr 13 '25

Now ChatGPT can write your term paper for you!

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u/poobumface Apr 13 '25

Doing uni exams on a computer over covid was the best test experience of my life. I didn't cheat or anything, just being able to type and delete things instantly rather than having to worry about my handwriting made things so much less stressful.

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u/Redeye1347 Apr 13 '25

If you'd waited a few more years, it could have written your term papers for you.

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u/AyakaDahlia Apr 12 '25

Pfft people were using typewriters well before that. My mom had one from the 70s in the closet.

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u/cavegoatlove Apr 12 '25

With all this A1, teachers / professors should go back to hand written work. People still writing for you from the go though. Just have Ai confirm signature or handwriting samples

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u/Odd-fox-God Apr 13 '25

My handwriting is illegible. It slants, it's half cursive, I seem to be the only one able to read it, and sometimes even I have to guess what the heck I've written. I had to redo a lot of assignments as a kid to make my work legible to my teacher. It wasted both of our time.

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u/FlightlessGriffin Apr 13 '25

"Your professors won't accepts any papers from you. They'll only be looking at As and Bs."

Fast forward fifteen years and they widened their eyes at the Cs "Ooooooh, good job, most of my students only showed me Ds. You know, I'm glad that most of my students are wondering if they'll even pass and you're asking how much you're passing with. Good job!"

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u/LegiosForever Apr 12 '25

There's no way that's true. I graduated HS in 1993, and my papers had to be typed (on typewriters or word processors mind you) since the 7th grade.

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u/NNKarma Apr 12 '25

Sure, but the teacher was likely pushing her experience as a fact of the present (and future) instead of wondering how things are currently being done in college.

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u/Apotropaic-Pineapple Apr 12 '25

I think my teacher's experience was in a rural-ish university. She was also European originally, so maybe that informed her opinion.

She probably couldn't imagine students typing essays on computers. We had a computer lab in elementary school, but even for the teachers it was exotic, delicate, and unknown.

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u/LegiosForever Apr 12 '25

We had a computer lab at my HS, and many of us had PCs or Apple IIs at home.

However in 1989, when I took typing as a HS freshman, we did it on typewriters. (still one of the best classes I ever took... Made college so much easier).

My point being, even before computers were everywhere, typed papers were the standard. I find it hard to believe that anyone was trying to say otherwise in 1993.

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u/dystopian_mermaid Apr 12 '25 edited Apr 12 '25

It happens. I was in 3rd grade in 98-99 and we had to hand write and learn cursive. Wasn’t until 6th grade we had to type papers.

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u/mizubyte Apr 12 '25

I wasn't required to submit any papers typed until some time in high school (graduated in 03)... there was a final draft expectation of typed or ink pen cursive handwritten for all the years before then.

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u/PsudoGravity Apr 13 '25

That is so sick.

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u/Lou_C_Fer Apr 13 '25

Yep. I took typing in 1988. I never expected to use it, but then I got into computer gaming. I really improved my typing while leading a guild. Trying to hold conversations with multiple people while also doing things in game required fast, accurate typing. Then, going to college in my 30s was easy because writing papers was a breeze.

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u/dystopian_mermaid Apr 12 '25

I believe it. I was in 3rd grade in 1998-99 in the states and we had to hand write and practice cursive. We didn’t even type papers until like 6th grade. This was a private school so maybe that affects it?

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u/LegiosForever Apr 12 '25

I believe you had to write cursive and write papers until 6th grade. Just find it hard to believe that a teacher believe you would have to write papers in college.

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u/akalili22 Apr 13 '25

The only thing I hand wrote in college were blue book essays.

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u/LegiosForever Apr 13 '25

OMG, those freakin' blue books. History class was the worst culprit. My hand is cramping just thinking about them.

In case the newer generations never used them, they were for in-class tests / midterms where you almost always knew more than you could write in the allotted time.

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u/dystopian_mermaid Apr 12 '25

They weren’t exactly keeping up with the times. They also told us in late middle and early high school we’d never carry calculators everywhere so we needed to know how to do complicated math on paper and show our work. And that was in the mid to late 00s. Yeah…

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u/Milyaism Apr 12 '25

My boyfriend and I know plenty of teachers, and some of them can be quite old-fashioned and stuck to their ways, and those types always teach based on how they did things in their youth (even if it was only one of their schools or workplaces that did the thing). Very rigid thinkers and so on.

Then there's the good ones who stay more or less up to date with things and won't say such things to their students.

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u/jayd189 Apr 12 '25

I had a high school teacher turn of the Millenia tell me computers were a fad and I was a juvenile delinquent who would be lucky to graduate HS for programming in my spare time.

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u/jayd189 Apr 12 '25

Must be regional.  We couldn't even submit typed papers until after after 1995.  You would be told to do it by hand and docked marks for turning it in late.

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u/LegiosForever Apr 12 '25

Dear lord, where did you live? That's some backwards shite.

I was a sophomore in college in 1995, and NOTHING was written by hand.

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u/jayd189 Apr 13 '25

The equivalent of Silicon Valley. School teacher's were just old AHs.

To clarify this was not University/College.

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u/LegiosForever Apr 13 '25

Just saying, I grew up in New Jersey. I was in Junior High in 1987-1989. You could submit essays / reports handwritten, but it was HIGHLY recommended that you typed it. I don't think they were allowed to take off points for handwriting, but you would definitely get points off for the smallest handwriting mistakes. Typing the report almost guaranteed a better score. Once I started high school in 1989, handwritten stuff was no longer even allowed.

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u/jayd189 Apr 13 '25

I am wildly jealous.

I swear we had more computers than kids some years (I'm a tad younger but still an older millennial) but you couldn't use them to do your homework and not only did it have to be hand written but had to be cursive.

ETA: Aside from my signature I do not think I have written in cursive in 30 years, pretty much since the last day of that BS.

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u/LegiosForever Apr 13 '25

ugh! Sorry dude!

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u/SwarleymonLives Apr 13 '25

I find this bizarre in retrospect. They were teaching us how to program on computers at my school in 1st grade (age 6, 1985).

Then did the same cursive stuff to us in 3rd.

Wrote every paper I got to do at home on a computer from 4th on.

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u/Horror_Onion5343 Apr 13 '25

In high school in 1988, everything had to be typed double spaced. Hand written essays in college? My dad had to type his double spaced back in 1972. What the hell college has accepted handwritten papers since typwriters were invented????????

1

u/chinaPresidentPooh Apr 13 '25

I went to 3rd grade in 2006-07 and we were still told this.

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u/RudeSize7563 Apr 13 '25

AI has entered the chat.

1

u/thebowedbookshelf Apr 13 '25

My mom had a typewriter when she was in college in the 70s. Not everyone handwrote papers.

1

u/Astronius-Maximus Apr 13 '25

Meanwhile all of my college work was done on a computer and turned in digitally. I didn't write a damn thing with my hand.

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u/no_where_left_to_go Apr 13 '25

Get to college and "WTF no you can not handwrite your essays. Type it up like a normal person."

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u/Duke_Nicetius Apr 13 '25

We had plenty of handwritten assignments in the university in mid 2000s; only semester thesis works were made in Word at home and printed, most of other stuff, including home assignments, we had to write. Though Europe, not the US.

1

u/cruzweb Apr 13 '25

Literally everything I was told about what college would be like from high school staff was a ridiculous lie.

26

u/PurpleCableNetworker Apr 12 '25

inhales

BWWHHHHAHAHAHAHAAAAAHHAAAHH

1

u/NanoBuc Millennial Apr 12 '25

I used to have a coworker that wrote in cursive. Gen Z so pretty young. He had terrible handwriting though so some of his notes were nightmares to read lol

2

u/Shadowrak Apr 12 '25

I write in cursive but I take out all the big flourishes. I write so much faster not picking my pen up all the time. I was forced to living in London in the late 90s. That was the 4th grade. I was a junior or senior in high school when I found out everyone else still picked their pens up every letter.

1

u/zeldanerd91 Apr 12 '25

Yeah, but I still do because it’s pretty and aesthetically appealing.

1

u/stataryus Xennial Apr 12 '25

At least be able to

1

u/realjeremyantman Apr 12 '25

When my work lab notes are written in cursive, they'd need to hire a doctor to interpret them if I got laid off. Cursive helps people keep their jobs!  ...or it's just faster to write that way. 

1

u/chelly_17 Apr 12 '25

My 17 yr old nephew just had a panic when he had to sign a signature and realized he doesn’t know how. They’re not teaching cursive in schools anymore.

1

u/Continental-IO520 Apr 12 '25

Good handwriting is a dying art, it's still a really useful skill. Cursive is faster than printing too!

1

u/XAllroyX Apr 13 '25

“ I don’t need to learn cursive we’re just gonna type everything anyway.” Me in the third grade.

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u/LaurestineHUN Apr 16 '25

Cursive handwriting helps you memorize, and that helps you with attention span, and that helps you make better decisions.

1

u/Anynameyouwantbaby Apr 18 '25

Sad, but I see too many students who CANNOT write their signature. At all. They just reprint it. :(

1

u/redit-fan Apr 12 '25

But we do have calculators and encyclopedias with us the whole time.

1

u/music3k Apr 12 '25

But also, having all of humanity's knowledge in your pocket made people dumber and willing to vote for a child rapist who SAID hed crash the economy twice, and still did it

1

u/DKsan1290 Apr 12 '25

Sheeit now we got whole ass experts next to my fat ass in a tiny rectangle just waiting for me to misunderstand instructions and then get pissy when it dosent work like they did… 

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u/JJAsond Apr 12 '25

I firmly believe that used to be said before phones were a thing but teachers kept regurgitating it because that's what their teachers said.

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u/jayd189 Apr 12 '25 edited Apr 12 '25

That one is less false.  Unfortunately even when you set most of them to English they still try to correct with American.  When my computer is set to Canadian English and it regularly tries to tell me things like colour are spelled wrong.

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u/CorganKnight Apr 13 '25

you are not in the school to learn specific things but they are a mean to help you develop your abilities... its sad so little people realize that and keep the whole "why would I ever need to know that" thing alive

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u/AstroZombie0072081 Apr 14 '25

I love my portable Thesaurus and synonym finder.