I don't quite follow the argument about UC being Oxbridge/Public School biased. Presumably any university is eligible to apply to enter the contest. Or is the suggestion that the questions are cunningly designed to filter out state-educated kids? If that is the premise, is anyone suggesting that questions should be cunningly designed to filter out public school kids? If so, lets have some examples, please.
University Challenge
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostI don't quite follow the argument about UC being Oxbridge/Public School biased. .
You need to get out more.
If so, lets have some examples, please.
NOT that there's anything wrong with learning these at all BUT who in the main does? (and i'm sure someone can come up with a few examples that are exceptions.... I can)
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostState schools may have dropped Latin and Greek because of the imposition of the National Straitjacket (sorry - Curriculum).
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View Post
Latin, Greek ?
NOT that there's anything wrong with learning these at all BUT who in the main does? (and i'm sure someone can come up with a few examples that are exceptions.... I can)
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Speaking on the Gonville and Caius College website, Mr Lovejoy said: “We’d put aside regular times to sit down together in the college bar, watch past episodes on YouTube and try to shout the answers at the telly before any of the contestants buzzed. That was really helpful for improving our reaction speeds.
He added: “Sometimes question-setters really like a particular area and they’ll keep coming back to it. For instance, they’re a bit obsessed with Pre-Raphaelite paintings, so we binged on some Wikipedia articles to make sure we were familiar with them. It paid off because we had a whole picture round on the Pre-Raphaelites! University Challenge isn’t about deep understanding – it’s about very wide, superficial knowledge combined with quick recall.”
(But isn't his name Loveday?)
The article gives another question involving Latin which nobody here has mentioned - “A noun paradigm in traditional Latin grammar, what five-letter word means a stupid or silly woman in Mexican Spanish, a university canteen in German?” to which he correctly answered Mensa.
But to define mensa as 'a noun paradigm' is hardly accurate - it happens to be the noun most often selected to illustrate the paradigm of the first declension feminine noun endings.
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Originally posted by jean View Post
The article gives another question involving Latin which nobody here has mentioned - “A noun paradigm in traditional Latin grammar, what five-letter word means a stupid or silly woman in Mexican Spanish, a university canteen in German?” to which he correctly answered Mensa.
But to define mensa as 'a noun paradigm' is hardly accurate - it happens to be the noun most often selected to illustrate the paradigm of the first declension feminine noun endings.
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Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostThat question was a good example of one that appeared to be about Latin...
Thinking about the questions rather than the answers reminds me of this, which I hope we haven't forgotten (but I bet he hopes we have!)
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