cthia wrote:Roguevictory wrote:Are we even sure there is a written portion to the Crusher, much less what value is assigned to it, and to each question?
IMO the kinds of skills the Crusher is looking for, or looking for a lack of aren't really the kind of things a written exam can test for very well.
There
should be. Written parts of the exam are normally structured to flesh out other areas of competence or lack thereof. In the case of the Crusher, it could possibly identify -- psychological imbalance, extreme prejudice, moral incompetence, nepotism, the Santino complex or the scrupulously bankrupt and etc.
Graduation with strings notwithstanding.
Roguevictory wrote:Perhaps but it seems like most of these would come up in the sims as well as they would in a written test. And testing for prejudice or morals is very tricky under any test form. Ditto for courage unless you can make the students think a sim or test is real rather then a test. Something like what Wesley went through in Star Trek TNG. He's waiting for a test then an accident happens and then after the accident is over he is told the accident was the test because they wanted to see how he would react if put in a situation where he had to leave someone to die in order to save another.
For the Honorverse the closest idea I can come up with is putting the cadet as watch officer on a training cruise then having an unscheduled war game start to see how they react when they think the missiles and graser fire are real.
Your points are well taken.
OTOH...
The operative idea here is "balance". You want your exams to be balanced. I'm remembering a High School teacher who opined that same thought. "My exams are going to be a mixture of multiple choice, written (and essay), fill-in the blanks, matching. Forget about what you are accustomed to up to this point. I want to know if you truly know the material rather than if you're adept at Cliff note cramming." And she was right. With that variety in format, you had to truly know the material.
Sims and written exams engage different areas of the brain. Just as real life battles would engage your entire brain. The Crusher is the time to flesh out certain inadequacies, not when the enemy comes over the hyper wall. Besides, can you really imagine that the Crusher is as difficult as it is and it NOT incorporate a written section? Heck, this far into the future, I can imagine that AI's verbally administer an
oral session as well -- time response sensitive. *Sort of a Sam Kinison type engaging A.I. personality, "Say it! Say it!! SAAAAY ITTTT! AHHHHHH!!! AHHHHH!!!" -- to simulate the pressure of decision.
This is an important reason and proof of why I feel RHN officers might have a problem with the Crusher --
first time around.
We as readers can't even imagine its scope. First timers of an exam are often thwarted by mechanical unfamiliarity. Alienation of testing methods -- similar to what used to happen to lots of students when first exposed to the mechanics of standardized tests -- its formality and all of the blackening of circles -- the not knowing what to expect. And remember, the RMN training standards are unequaled -- as an extension to its education
and its training technology, methods and hardware.
And remember, the Crusher isn't easy to pass by well trained and educated RMN personnel.
I'd like to witness firsthand how Haven's version "of", stands up to the "Pit".
*
https://youtu.be/9Hn9xAaKUbw