Here are four True/False questions (out of a total of 20) on my first hourly exam, in October 2006:
A line intersects a hyperbolic paraboloid always in 2 distinct points.
- There is a quadric surface, each of whose intersections with the coordinate planes is either an ellipse or a parabola.
- The level curves f(x, y) = 1 and f(x, y) = 2 of a smooth function f never intersect.
- The equation x^2 + y^2 − z^2 = −1 defines a one-sheeted hyperboloid.
Then a series of short answer questions, such as:

a) When and where will it first hit the Earth?
b) What velocity will it have at the impact?

I went to office hours all the time and developed nervous habits; after each exam, I exited the auditorium with both a diminished sense of self and ragged nails. Nonetheless, I'm pretty sure that I could answer at least half the T/F questions on sight back then. When I look at the questions now, my mind can't even glean meaning from the scattered symbols. One-sheeted hyperboloid? Quadric surface? Re-enacting Armageddon?

It's midterm season, so I see copies of old Math 21a hourlies -- now posted as practice exams -- floating around the computer lab. And I am reminded that what I take for granted is not a constant. After all, I've read Flowers for Algernon.
2 comments:
When you become stupid, slowly wither, and die because you no longer realize you need food, I will always bring flowers to your grave.
Thanks? =/
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