Do you bunk your classes? Do you bunk you classes or are you the one who normally aims for 100% attendance?
The person is asking whether we skip class. It's yet another sign that he or she doesn't get that this is a distance learning forum.
A Google search reveals the exact string "Do you bunk you classes or are you the one who normally aims for 100% attendance?" in a poll on entrance-exam.net. Four out of the total of five posts by learningtone are directly copied from entrance-exam.net, and they're not from the same poster there; if they were that would fit the one charitable interpretation I can think of, that learningtone is so interested in the answers to these questions - another one was "What is better medicine or engineering?" - that they're copying their own posts on entrance-exam.net to see what we think here. The one other post by learningtone consists of, "done! have a nice day," in a thread where a student was asking for responses to their survey. I'm afraid learningtone is almost certainly a bot, human-assisted bot, or a somewhat clueless human content farming in an attempt to establish a nominally legitimate identity on degreeinfo identity to get past this board's spam controls.
The last time I skipped a residential class, I was in the emergency room of the local hospital with pneumonia, so I guess I can say that I do not bunk my classes.
That's pretty much what the professor said when I handed him the physician's note the next week (good naturedly, of course). :bandit:
Well, I did attend a RA B&M for ten years, and I must admit I did bunk once in a while! :smile: Abner :smile:
Well, I attended DeVry and failed new student orientation because I missed more then half the classes. There were many days when "Dean Randell" called no school :bigeyes:
I used to skip out of my programming concepts class to do game programming in C at home with DirectX when it first came out back in 1995. I was unimpressed with the level of knowledge of my teachers at USF and thought I was better off at home programming on my own. I was right and wrong.