Comic: “Go with what you know”

January 14, 2009
Comic:  “Go with what you know”

About this comic

picture-52

If could sum up my jr high, highschool, and college days in one comic, then this would be it.

16 Responses to Comic: “Go with what you know”

  1. gamerman says:

    LMAO love the comic genius that is Scott Johnson

    Wewt First

  2. Bearbutt says:

    The above: What my high school math papers were supposed to look like.
    .
    The bottom: Reality.

  3. Chris says:

    Far and away my favorite comic of yours.

  4. jawbonerforlife says:

    do i see some dead space in there.

  5. Churchy says:

    Whenever I don’t know answer on tests I generally just write down either a color, or “Jesus”.

    I’m sure in some special way both are correct.

  6. yoMama says:

    The answer to all is is 42. Simple.

    Find the point where the following lines intersect…… = 42
    Find c using the rule of cosines where a=3, b=76, A=65Degrees…. = 42
    Draw the curve of the following equation: y=5x^7 + 5x^6 + … = 42

  7. I ended up drawing on the white board a lot in school too. We would have little draw wars between two classes.

  8. Anonymous Coward says:

    Didn’t your son get in trouble for doing just that not to long ago?

  9. Juddson (aka RavingDork) says:

    THAT IS GREAT! I just got back from a 1 hour math class followed by 7 hours of non-stop math homework (for the second time this week!). The timeing of this wonderful, beautiful comic could not have been more perfect!

  10. Steve says:

    Awesome, I loved it amd it about sums it up for the most of us…err, me.

  11. Steve says:

    My spelling is just as bad *and*

  12. PrincessIncognita says:

    This is exactly what I’m going through at the moment studying for the GREs!! :D

  13. Pineapple Farmer says:

    The Answer to ALL math problems: 7.

  14. Eric says:

    The math part was easy for me in school… too easy. I was easily bored with math because they would teach a concept, I would get it, then they’d make us practice the concept over and over regardless that I already understood it. I ended up drawing a lot. (I was the kind of kid in kindergarten that told the teacher that 3 could be divided in 2 and you’d have 1 1/2 and 1 1/2 and get told by the teacher to sit down and stop being a smart alec.)

    Hmmm. I liked drawing. How did I end up in computers?

  15. Brian says:

    My default math answer was 8675309.

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