I took the survey. Skipped out at the “unreasonably long” section.
Will it handle things properly if I return to it another day?
Note, if you ask me question that I can look up in two seconds flat, and the next question is “without checking sources, assess the probability of the last answer being correct” then I’m not sure you’re going to get the results you’re looking for. I consider the Internet as part of my partly trustable memory that I reference when I want to achieve success in the world I.e. all the time—but its not clear that’s a commonly held opinion.
As a general rule, when taking surveys to test your knowledge, I believe you are supposed to not look up anything unless specifically instructed. It’s like crossword puzzles in that way.
I took the survey. Skipped out at the “unreasonably long” section. Will it handle things properly if I return to it another day?
Note, if you ask me question that I can look up in two seconds flat, and the next question is “without checking sources, assess the probability of the last answer being correct” then I’m not sure you’re going to get the results you’re looking for. I consider the Internet as part of my partly trustable memory that I reference when I want to achieve success in the world I.e. all the time—but its not clear that’s a commonly held opinion.
As a general rule, when taking surveys to test your knowledge, I believe you are supposed to not look up anything unless specifically instructed. It’s like crossword puzzles in that way.
Ah. I took the explicit rules for section 7 and my natural tendencies and didn’t pick up on the intent for section 8 until it was too late.
I didn’t notice that, there—that’s probably a significant flaw in the methodology.