One thing that I have heard about AS is that a universal theme that seems to run amongst all of us is that we all have great difficulties when it comes to taking tests.
In the past two days, I had to take two different tests in two different classes by the same instructor so how the tests were worded was pretty much the same, the main difference was that the test I took yesterday was a multiple choice test, the test I took today was a mixed fill-in-the-blank/short essay test.
The multiple choice test I took yesterday I had no trouble with, despite the fact that I did little studying for it. The test I had today I went through much slower. But interestingly I still breezed through the FITB questions, but I got stuck on the short essays questions which were of a compare and contrast style.
One question in particular hung me up.
Quote:
Compare and contrast Brown's attention shift with Lloyd Bitzer's rehtorical situation.
Even though I knew the criteria for each method quite well, when it came time to analyze side-by-side the two, I was stumped. I spent a good 20 minutes on this question thinking about what to write before I had to abandon it, and move on since I had a 90 minute time limit. I only got three compares and one contrast, not enough I feel to earn me credit for the question which is in a 300 level class.
Quote:
More rote than meaning
This is one of Gillberg's criteria for AS. I was confused by what it meant at first, but now it makes more sense to me. I had initally thought that based on what I had read about rote memory that mine was fairly bad, but now I'm starting to re-asess that thought. When compared with what I now feel is my lousy ability to comprehend, my rote skills are fairly good, as evidenced by the time it took me to breeze through my mulitple choice test on tuesday
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I live my life to prove wrong those who said I couldn't make it in life...