[nfb-talk] cheating for studentsinjunior/high schoolsandincollege?

Bonnie Ainsworth cedarwoman1965 at neb.rr.com
Sat Dec 16 09:48:43 CST 2006


The other thing that you might consider is making the option of tutoring 
available for your children in the future, or maybe a little extra study 
time.  Maybe they might be interested in a subject they don't do well at but 
cheating doesn't accomplish anything.  It just makes a person look for the 
easy way out in life!

Bonnie Ainsworth
Lincoln, NE USA

Aspire to inspire before you expire.

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Josh" <jkenn337 at gmail.com>
To: "NFB Talk Mailing List" <nfb-talk at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Thursday, December 14, 2006 7:18 PM
Subject: Re: [nfb-talk] cheating for studentsinjunior/high 
schoolsandincollege?


Oh I don't think I'd go so far as to beat my kids bottoms. I would only give
mine a swat if they were doing something to put their lives in danger. If
they were cheating I'd ask them why first. If they said they just didn't get
the subject and they tried understanding it and studying it and just didn't
get it I'd then ask my kids if they asked their teacher for help. If they
said yes and if they just don't get the subject. I'd tell them, I'd rather
you fail a test in an honest manner than by cheating. If you get bad grades
because you're not good at something or it's just not your thing, that's ok.
Instead, concentrate on what you're good at and don't worry so much about
what you are not good at. 



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