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- From: crb7q@kelvin.seas.Virginia.EDU (Cameron Randale Bass)
- Subject: Re: EINSTEIN'S SCHOOL DAYS
- Message-ID: <1992Nov8.032902.25686@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU>
- Sender: usenet@murdoch.acc.Virginia.EDU
- Organization: University of Virginia
- References: <17241@mindlink.bc.ca> <BxDAnL.Bnp@helios.physics.utoronto.ca>
- Date: Sun, 8 Nov 1992 03:29:02 GMT
- Lines: 62
-
- In article <BxDAnL.Bnp@helios.physics.utoronto.ca> neufeld@helios.physics.utoronto.ca (Christopher Neufeld) writes:
- >In article <17241@mindlink.bc.ca> Gordon_Wong@mindlink.bc.ca (Gordon Wong) writes:
- >>I read that Einstein was a very poor student in his early years. Was it
- >>because he just didn't bother to go to school because he found that what was
- >>being taught just wasn't stimulating enough for him or was it something else?
- >
- > It was, I am told, due primarily to historian error (and likely a dose
- >of wishful thinking).
- > European schools did and do use a system assigning numbers in place of
- >the american letter-grade system. A student's mark was summarized by a
- >number from one to five. Now, I believe that at present a good mark is a
- >'1', and a poor mark is '5'. It wasn't always so, though. When young
- >Einstein began school the mapping was opposite to the way it is now.
- >Partway through his schooling they changed to the modern convention.
- > Now, some historian goes back and looks at Einstein's old report cards
- >and sees that he went from earning '4' and '5' to earning '1' and '2' all
- >of a sudden, partway through his career. "Well," (s)he says smugly to
- >(her)himself, "look at that! I got a better math mark in grade three than
- >Albert Einstein!"
- > The quick answer, according to news reports which came out about two
- >years ago, is that Einstein was always a very good student throughout
- >his schooling. Of course, there is that famous quote by some math
- >professor allegedly telling Einstein that he "would never amount to
- >much", but that doesn't necessarily mean he was doing badly in that
- >course, either.
-
- As for the earlier years, some quotations from his sister Maja
-
- on Einstein in primary school:
-
- "Nothing of his special aptitude for mathematics was noticable at
- the time; he wasn't even good at arithmetic in the sense of being
- quick and accurate, though he was reliable and persevering."
-
- on Einstein in Gymnasium:
-
- "he already had a prelidiction for solving complicated problems in
- applied arithmetic, though the computational errors that he made kept him
- from appearing particularly talented in the eyes of his teachers."
-
- and
-
- "actually, he was very uncomfortable in school. The style of teaching
- in most subjects was repugnant to him; moreover, his home room
- teacher did not seem very well disposed towards him."
-
- He did do a bit better in the Canton school in Aarau before
- being admitted to ETH. However, the tales of Einstein being
- thought a bad student are certainly not myths.
-
- If you look at his grades at ETH, he received mostly 4's and 5's
- out of 6. Weber gave him a couple of 6's in Electrotechnical
- Laboratory. However, people were not hopping all over themselves
- to hire Herr Einstein upon leaving ETH. Some of this had to do with
- the fact that he was not thought a stellar candidate for a job.
-
- dale bass
- --
- C. R. Bass crb7q@virginia.edu
- Department of Mechanical,
- Aerospace and Nuclear Engineering
- University of Virginia (804) 924-7926
-