Pubdate: Tue, 25 Jun 2002
Source: Japan Today (Japan)
Copyright: 2002, Japan Today
Website: http://www.japantoday.com/
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Author:  Reuters News

WINNIPEG, Manitoba - A Canadian teacher has been suspended after shocking a 
small northern Manitoba school by distributing a math exam that included 
questions about pimps, prostitutes, machine guns, cocaine trafficking and 
getting "knocked up."

The math proficiency test included questions such as: "Rufus is a pimp for 
three girls. If the price is $65 per trick, how many tricks per day must 
each girl turn to support Rufus' $800 per day crack habit?"

And then there was the trouble with Hector.

"Hector knocked up three girls in his gang. There are 27 girls in his gang. 
What is the exact percentage of the girls in the gang that Hector knocked up?"

Parents of the 13-year-old and 14-year old students who attend Juniper 
School in Thompson, Manitoba, said they were outraged.

And the province's minister of education, Drew Caldwell, said he was 
"disturbed."

The exam, which asked students for their name, gang name and home room, was 
fast becoming the talk of this nickel-mining community of 15,000 people 800 
kilometers north of Winnipeg.

Supplied with the exact speed of travel and the number of seconds it takes 
to load a shot gun, another test question asked students to calculate the 
distance, Billie, a skateboard thief, would be able to flee before getting 
"whacked."

Newspaper reports said that board members at the Mystery Lake School 
District stripped the veteran teacher of her classroom duties at a meeting 
earlier this week. She was also suspended without pay for three days.

The test appeared to be modeled after an exam called "The City of Los 
Angeles High School Math Proficiency Exam," found on an Internet joke site. 
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