A while ago I used to enlist the help of my trusty servant Google when I've needed help with confusing homework that requires the Si (Introverted Sensing) function that demands real-world details and taxes heavily on my intuition, quite frankly. Of course, there are some questions you just can't find on Google, Yahoo, or even Duck Duck Go or YouTube. Just because you can't find the answer, however, doesn't mean you necessarily won't find the questions, or, as I found as a reoccurring pattern, a string of questions. Yes, the hack I am describing is not one for students doing the homework, but for teachers assigning the homework. I will just get straight to the point; I used to see several of my teachers find questions on the chapter-related topics randomly in Google images that are printable, and when opportunity strikes, wisely the opportunity is taken.
In other words, they use the internet (today still probably) for the work just as much as students use the internet to answer the work! This was a groundbreaking discovery for me; I genuinely had no idea that teachers could pull that! Maybe others aren't aware or maybe I was living under a box, but I kid you not, there was one time back when I was in my late teens, where I was searching for my anatomy homework to label parts of connective tissue proper, and I found the exact same format from Pinterest, of all places. The sad thing is, this isn't even the first or the second or the third time; this is a common trend that my teachers would use Pinterest for homework inspo 😂😂😂
I am shook, truly.
As an alleged INTJ, [I still don't know what type I am with 100% certainty,] I suppose a number of real world topics come as a shock to me, seeing as my real-world function Se (Extroverted Sensing) is the one that gets suppressed. If you aren't sure what the cognitive functions are, I will provide a reverence page in an upcoming chapter. Conclusion: teachers are grown-up versions of sneaky students, but I suppose they figured high schoolers already knew that?
YOU ARE READING
Myers Briggs Through the Lense of an INTJ;)
RandomSince I couldn't find a myers briggs tag... (smh)