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Would you tell?

5 replies

ohyesido · 18/06/2026 16:46

Imagine you were set a challenge to test your knowledge after a learning exercise. You complete a test and score 82%. Your two colleagues get 86 and 93% respectively.

you later learn that one colleague had two attempts and the higher scoring colleague had three. Would you tell the trainer that although your final score was the lowest, it was based on the first try?

I feel like I have to suck it up and be content with the private knowledge that I acted with integrity

OP posts:
WhatAMarvelousTune · 18/06/2026 16:47

So they weren’t allowed additional attempts?

Does this score matter in any way?

ohyesido · 18/06/2026 16:49

I didn’t know repeat attempts were possible. It wasn’t stated that we couldn’t try again, and there’s nothing at stake. I just feel like it’s a moral issue

OP posts:
Chuzzwomblitz · 18/06/2026 16:50

Go and have another go then

cauliflowerforever · 18/06/2026 16:51

I absolutely wouldn’t care ! What is the training for?

WhatAMarvelousTune · 18/06/2026 16:54

ohyesido · 18/06/2026 16:49

I didn’t know repeat attempts were possible. It wasn’t stated that we couldn’t try again, and there’s nothing at stake. I just feel like it’s a moral issue

In that case I wouldn’t care at all. We have random bits of training at work with tests at the end. I can’t remember my score 3 seconds after I click off the screen.

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