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Post by millionaireloveruk on Nov 11, 2017 14:46:11 GMT -5
Right, but I asked three questions, and you answered just one by copy and pasting from Wikipedia. Can you answer my other questions, please?
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Post by supermillionaire on Nov 11, 2017 16:02:46 GMT -5
The second reason why I want to do this experiment is because I want to see the public's opinion out in the open, and not just on the internet.
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Post by Gagamillionaire on Nov 11, 2017 16:18:52 GMT -5
So if you‘re trying to prove that we are susceptible to the fundamental attribution error, your grade system is way too vague. You‘d have to clarify what the grades should refer to specifically. There can be lots of reasons why somebody might give a contestant an F. It doesn‘t have to be that the think they‘re stupid. And in that case you can‘t reliably confirm your hypothesis. And not telling people you want to use them as test subjects is questionable, too, if we‘re talking science.
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Post by millionaireloveruk on Nov 12, 2017 6:53:12 GMT -5
Maybe one day I'll receive all three answers to my questions... Please tell me, why should people on this forum be your guinea pigs?
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Post by supermillionaire on Nov 13, 2017 12:03:13 GMT -5
On second thought, you don't have to be my guinea pigs. The intended purpose was to see how people in the outside world would grade contestants' performances, but since you're not taking it very well, I'll scrap it.
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Post by supermillionaire on Nov 15, 2017 14:44:43 GMT -5
On another second thought: if you ever do academic editions of a Millionaire RPG, focusing on academic school subjects, I'd like you to use grades. There should be four academic versions: An elementary school version, focusing on grades 1-5; a middle school version, focusing on grades 6-8; a high school version, focusing on grades 9-12; and a college version, focusing on undergraduate area requirements and classes for earning a Bachelor's degree. When their game is over, you give them a grade for their performance, similar to schools. The academic editions that I thought of were inspired by Who Wants to Be a Millionaire for Schools, a former software program aimed for usage in schools in the UK. However, instead of just 6 questions, these RPGs will use the standard 15-question format. The grading scale ranges from A+ to F, with no D or E grades. The game will use the classic monetary amounts from 1998-2007 on the UK version. Here's how it should work:
$0-$500: F $1,000-$4,000: C $8,000-$16,000: C+ $32,000-$64,000: B $125,000-$250,000: B+ $500,000: A $1 million: A+
Now, the purpose of grading is only to put a label on it, similar to the academic grades in school. It does not reflect a person's intelligence; if they lose before question 5 and leave with nothing, then they get a grade of F, but it does not mean that we're calling that person stupid; they just didn't do well because they didn't know the particular answers to those questions.
There are these 2 videos on YouTube about Millionaire for Schools:
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Post by FinalAnswer19 on Nov 16, 2017 1:13:14 GMT -5
Noted.
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Post by supermillionaire on Nov 18, 2017 12:13:01 GMT -5
Will we see an academic edition RPG on this board?
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Post by FinalAnswer19 on Nov 19, 2017 16:48:13 GMT -5
Will we see an academic edition RPG on this board? Hard to say.
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Post by supermillionaire on Nov 22, 2017 15:42:04 GMT -5
I would certainly like to see an academic school subjects edition RPG on this board, and if it does happen, please implement the grading system that I came up with. Remember, it has to have four versions: elementary school (grades 1-5), middle school (grades 6-8), high school (grades 9-12), and college (pre-requisite undergraduate/Bachelor's Degree).
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Post by millionaireloveruk on Nov 22, 2017 17:43:33 GMT -5
One of the main problems with that would be using an American-based system, when a large proportion of members here are from outside the US, and therefore have different year systems, grading systems and curriculums. You’d have to come up with an ‘international standard’ in order to make it fair for everyone playing.
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Post by FinalAnswer19 on Nov 22, 2017 17:48:40 GMT -5
You’d have to come up with an ‘international standard’ in order to make it fair for everyone playing. You planted the seed!
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Post by supermillionaire on Nov 22, 2017 18:14:11 GMT -5
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GSK
Posts: 1,358
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Post by GSK on Nov 24, 2017 12:18:05 GMT -5
Just because you're taking psychology does not mean psychological disciplines and studies need to be applied to a fan forum about a television game show.
Relevant: I very highly doubt anyone on this forum will come up with "an international grading system" simply because no one here probably cares that much.
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Post by supermillionaire on Nov 27, 2017 12:14:35 GMT -5
Well, I would still like to see an academic school subject edition RPG on this forum.
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