this post was submitted on 22 Jul 2025
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Don't be mean. I promise to do my best to judge that fairly.
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The first guy didn't "put the work in it" at all. He was just good or lucky.
The teacher probably said "yeah that's a paper, and they are a good student who has already demonstrated their knowledge in class. I don't need to read the whole thing"
In 7th grade I had an essay that I just totally skipped doing. The teacher handed them back to the class with grades and apologized for losing mine, but told me I got a B+.
I had the opposite teacher (also 7th grade), who lost my essay, claimed I didn't do it, and gave me a zero. I still had the doc file, so printed it off again and re-handed it in. But by then it was "past the late turn in date so still worth zero."
Oh, and it was past the late turn in date because she took a month to grade them, so I had no idea she had lost mine until past her arbitrary deadline.
From this experience I learned about covering your ass in communications with authorities, which I don't think was what I was supposed to learn from the essay but it sure worked.
Learning how to write efficiently and having gained a enough knowledge of the subject that you can slap together an essay in 30 minutes on the bus is putting the work in it.
You say they were "just good". Sounds like they had to "git gud" in the first place.
How do people become good at something?