When in class, should you answer all questions presented, correct people and show your full brain power; or should you keep quite to yourself, think alone and listen to brainlets talk?
Sit quietly and laugh internally at brainlets
you should show your full brain power.
Just answer after other people have failed ro respond, to reassure the teacher that there's still some hope for humanity, while not looking like a dick
>>9059453
this
>>9059375
No mercy
>>9059453
Only correct answer desu
Nothing worse than saying a wrong answer though
>>9059453
This, unless the question being asked is something you genuinely care about and want to begin discussion on.
>>9059375
you should, but do it very carefully because you could be wrong and you should be plain and reasonable instead of a dick about it
you should ask questions about what specifically you are uncertain about
>>9059375
be sure to ask several questions each lecture if possible, and also raise your hand to make relevant comments. your peers will grow to admire you as you humble them with your intellect.
>>9059375
I believe in shutting the fuck up, you can't win in this situation.
you always make a fool of yourself
I've blown off classes I hate by just putting in my headphones in and reading a textbook. Doing this, I've been able to test out of many hard classes.
Laugh internally and cringe at brainlets trying way too hard to understand a simple concept.
You should talk as much as possible giving retarded answers on purpose, still acing the test and graduating with honors.
Scoff as loudly as possible at any attempted answer to let people know how inferior they are to you, always try to answer every question after that but always answer it wrong.
>>9059375
Kind of depends on the class. In your lower tier classes like your gen eds and your freshmen and sophomore major classes I'd just stay quiet. When you start getting much deeper into the subject matter later on in your degree I'd be more vocal because it can actually add to the lecture and help others struggling with the content. Let's be honest here, if you actually get to your upper tier classes it should be obvious that you are not some autist trying to show off but rather that you have a good conceptual understanding of the material and will likely ask intelligent questions related to said material.