I’m going to reveal a dirty little secret about educators. Okay, this is a secret about me that may apply to other educators. When students made funny mistakes on their written assignments–the kind that made me laugh out loud and forget the pain of grading piles of papers–I photocopied the gaffes and put them in a special folder. Whenever I needed a good laugh–like after a faculty meeting when we resolved to table a 90-minute debate over a comma versus a semi-colon–I’d pull out my Student Bloopers folder and engage in chuckle-therapy.
Is this mean-spirited? Maybe. Aren’t educators supposed to be compassionate? Of course. I corrected their mistakes and gave them another chance to submit their papers. But, come on. These bloopers were like finding real gold after panning a fool’s gold river for days. Would you throw the precious nuggets back?
It’s time when young people are heading back to college and when professors are preparing for the migration of students back to their classrooms. Let’s start off the academic year with a bit of levity. I’m sharing a bit of my Student Blooper collection.
(NOTE: All grammatical, spelling, and other errors are the students’. Read them carefully.)
- In an essay about the Taliban: “Also the leaders of the Taliban demand that no women should show their faces in public or else they will be killed or even beat to death.”
- Documenting the efficacy of America’s educational system: “I think the U.S. system of education is fine. I say this because I have been educated soley in the U.S. and I feel pretty smart.”
- Describing the effects of rape on the victim: “Memories are a hard thing to forget.”
- Describing issues related to women in the workplace: “And older women are being told of new cases and experiments with their bodies such as menopause.”
- Debating capital punishment: “You could be punished to death with the crime of cheating people when selling them beer. The means of execution were burning, frowning, and impaling on sharp sticks.”
- Describing a primitive jungle culture: “The elder people are content with what they do, and the children play carelessly in the streets.”
- Describing Domestic Violence Intervention programs: “But each case is different and can be referred to individual counseling or what’s needed in that case. If the case wasn’t cut clear then both parties should be in the program, because it takes two to tangle.”
- Analyzing the drug problem: “Marijuana users can cum on a daily basis while the dealers have to wait for customers every day.”
- Conclusion of a paper about sexual abuse: “To conclude this paper I would have to say that this is a subject that I really enjoy because it makes me realize what kind of sick world we live in.”
- In a paper arguing the merits of euthanasia: “Notice above how good death is in quotes; I’m assuming that the quotations cause the great debate about euthanasia since most people today believe that quotations show some hidden meaning.”
- Opening line in a paper for my Social Problems class: “This paper before you is one that should concern every single person on the face of the earth.”
Should I send this paper to the FBI? CIA? NATO? English Department?




Dec 17, 2014 @ 10:27:55
They sure did making reading all those essays a bit less tiresome! Glad you liked them. 🙂
Dec 10, 2014 @ 19:11:43
Totally loved these, Lorna. I will be sharing your post with some educator friends. Especially snorted my tea over the drug abuse comment! Then there’s your incredible talent for sharing the perfect visual & quip! My mother-the-teacher confessed in her 80s that it was “the rotten little deevils” she remembered.
Feb 09, 2012 @ 05:46:31
Oct 11, 2011 @ 09:00:28
Sep 20, 2011 @ 09:17:45
Yes, that one is a classic! Glad you enjoyed the post!
Sep 19, 2011 @ 21:39:47
Oh heavens, those are awful.
Don’t feel bad, I’ve done the same thing. We would often share them, teacher to teacher, and laugh as a group. My personal favorite was from a student who asserted that Hester Prynne served as “an escape goat” for the people of Salem Village in _The Scarlet Letter_. That never gets old…
Aug 31, 2011 @ 10:56:18
Oh, I’m glad! Sometimes I feel guilty that I did this (hence the “dirty little secret). I’ll be sharing more soon.
Aug 30, 2011 @ 18:37:04
If I’d been a teacher I think I’d have done the same and, yes, I’d like to see more!
Aug 30, 2011 @ 13:34:52
You just can’t make this stuff up!
Aug 30, 2011 @ 11:38:54
Yes, me too.
Aug 30, 2011 @ 11:30:52
I don’t know, those “quotation marks” always portend something nefarious… 😉
Stay tuned for much more of these student bloopers.
Aug 30, 2011 @ 11:29:22
Google Images is my BFF! Glad you liked the post and thanks for dropping by. Hope to see you again!
Aug 30, 2011 @ 11:28:23
So glad you had some “chucke-therapy” as well! Stay tuned for more!
Aug 30, 2011 @ 10:18:28
Yes, we call them “teachable moments” and I didn’t let them slide by–I used them to help students. Now I’m using them for “chuckle-therapy” for more than just me.
Aug 30, 2011 @ 10:16:56
I’m glad another educator “approves” of sharing these. More will be coming!
Aug 30, 2011 @ 08:57:30
As someone who has spent her whole career in higher education, I LOVED this post! Thanks for the grins. I remember reading a book that was a compilation of these sorts of “student bloopers” years ago – it was hilarious. Don’t think it is mean at all to get a chuckle out of these. As Jimmy Buffett said, “if we couldn’t laugh we would all go insane : )”
Aug 30, 2011 @ 00:15:34
Luved it! And most definitely want to read more goofs. It is the mistakes of people that allows everyone to learn.
Aug 29, 2011 @ 20:26:24
Hahaha! My parents were teachers and every year we pull out a photocopy of a note from her student’s mother. It says something along the lines of, “You bitch. I caint beleeve you is yellin at my dawter for not doing her homework. Just call me and I will tell you to f*ck off. There.” Guess that answers the nature/nurture question in one fell swoop.
Aug 29, 2011 @ 11:44:46
Hahahaha, hilarious!! Absolutely loved it!
Aug 29, 2011 @ 04:26:27
Some pictures are very interesting!! especially the dog ass wear the glasses!! lol!
Aug 29, 2011 @ 01:14:10
LOL! I needed some “chuckle-therapy” tonight! Thank you – and of course I’d like to read more!
P.S. There’s no hidden meaning behind these quotation marks. LOL
Aug 28, 2011 @ 17:57:50
Loved this post! It made me remember those papers I’d be reading in those years before I retired. 🙂
Aug 28, 2011 @ 17:52:00
Enjoyed this post. It reminds me of all the comments I hear while at my job, cleaning common areas in apartment buildings. One remark that comes to mind was several years ago, I had gone out on the front porch for a moment, for a 2 minute break. When one of the tenants came out I said, “Isn’t the air so clear and crisp today Margaret?” She replied, “Yes! That’s why I come outside to smoke my cigarette!” Keep at your blog, it’s a pleasure to read! -L
Aug 28, 2011 @ 07:40:07
Funny! My head is spinning with all the redundancy and repetitiveness of your circular argument…
Aug 28, 2011 @ 07:38:00
And what a way to go!
Aug 28, 2011 @ 07:37:38
Trust me, the comic relief was much needed after hours of grading essays and research papers. I’m glad I had the forethought to photocopy them–names redacted, of course…
Aug 28, 2011 @ 07:35:33
I shall. I’ve collected quite a few over the years.
Aug 28, 2011 @ 07:34:17
I tried to maintain my professional integrity and have a bit of fun, too. Sometimes the balance is difficult. That’s why I waited for 5 years to release these treasures and I collected these over nearly 20 years of teaching. I don’t think the best CSI team could find who wrote these things!
Aug 28, 2011 @ 05:17:49
Photocopying student gaffes to a ‘blooper file’ to use as post-faculty meeting pep-pill? I’m with you, Lorna. Afterall, student confidentiality was honoured – “no names-no packdrill”. You corrected the gobbledygook and grabbed a slice of chuckle-therapy. Way to go, cheers catchul8r molly
Aug 28, 2011 @ 03:13:43
Yep quite a few of us at work are sick of this menopause experiment! These are classic, you have to share more.
Aug 28, 2011 @ 02:20:09
OMG won’t sleep tonight at all now giggling about these to myself… sure, more, it makes me feel great… I don’t feel so terrible about all my bloopers here on my blog now, LOL Sounds like great comic relief for the markers and now we benefit, too. Thank you for the riotous read 🙂
Aug 27, 2011 @ 23:01:55
I love the frowning penguin, that look certainly could kill you, with laughter.
Aug 27, 2011 @ 22:54:00
These are great! I can’t wait to read more.
Some of them remind me of what I’d write in papers when I came up against the dreaded “meet the required word count or perish”. I’d always overcome that by dazzling the professor. Example: “In this primary source, we find the author offering a specious and circular argument which becomes, in the end, repetitive, redundant and says the same thing over and over again.”
I’m pretty sure I got a lot of A’s from dazzling. Or being so confusing I was given a “pity A.”
Aug 27, 2011 @ 18:52:07
Yes, college students–and not just Freshmen. Makes you wonder, at least it made me wonder. I had many a discussion with the English faculty. They scratched their heads and blamed the high schools. I made sure to go over these essays or research papers with my students so that they could learn from their mistakes. The buck had to stop somewhere.
And I’ve used the phrase, “It takes two to tangle.” ever since I read that blooper. It’s so much better than the original phrase–makes me think of Tigger!
Aug 27, 2011 @ 18:47:43
You got it!
Aug 27, 2011 @ 18:47:26
Everyone makes mistakes. I sure did and do. I don’t even know the students who made these gaffes because I blotted out the names before I photocopied them–just to make sure they were anonymous in case anyone else found the folder.
I wonder if most teachers keep these kinds of things…
Aug 27, 2011 @ 18:44:00
There were “aha” moments during my class. I made sure to privately go over their papers and show them how to write a proper essay/research paper and how to proof-read their work. For me, teaching was a passion, not just a job. I hope most students left my class with better writing and thinking skills.
Aug 27, 2011 @ 18:41:39
I have a folder full of this stuff. And I didn’t pick the best ones–just the ones on top. I could generate several more posts from my Student Blooper folder. Just ask, and you shall receive…
Aug 27, 2011 @ 18:37:12
These are all from student papers–exactly as I read them. I swear on my Ph.D.! Do you see why I loved teaching so much? Memories…yes, they are hard to forget!
Aug 27, 2011 @ 17:52:21
C’mon, Lorna, quit it. You had me laughing so hard it hurt, so I was considering euthanasia by throwing myself on a sharp stick. It’s this kind of sick humor that everyone in the world should be concerned with. I’m going to try to forget I read it but..well…you know how memories can be.
Aug 27, 2011 @ 17:33:51
Please! Keep this kind of topic as a regular! I’d say keep it cumming, but well, it’s not marijuana. I mean, this post just killed me, and even after it killed me, I laughed to death. So much better than dying by frowning, for sure!
Aug 27, 2011 @ 17:27:58
Hopefully, there was an aha moment later during their college career. I sure hope so.
Aug 27, 2011 @ 16:38:25
“The means of execution were burning, frowning, and impaling on sharp sticks.” I think that one was my favourite, but I guffawed at the marijuana one.
I understand how some might take extreme offensive to what you’ve posted. Only because they either wrote the stuff or are of the group who would have! It’s all anonymous and really, if you can’t laugh at yourself, what good is being able to laugh? I would love to see some more. I wonder what kind of things my teachers kept that I wrote…..
Aug 27, 2011 @ 16:34:35
Thanks for making me laugh! I’d love to hear more.
Aug 27, 2011 @ 16:17:55
College students?! I would love to see more of these bloopers–I giggled out loud–great stress reliever!
“…means of execution were burning, frowning …” (!!?)
I think it does take two to “tangle”.
Aug 27, 2011 @ 16:17:33
It’s a sad way to leave this earth…
Thanks for stopping by and commenting. Hope to see you again!
Aug 27, 2011 @ 16:16:33
I have a ton more to share. They’re too precious to keep for myself.
My English teacher looked like a wizened angry prune. I learned A LOT from her!
Aug 27, 2011 @ 15:45:06
As an educator, I often get some pretty good ones, too. I never thought about collecting them. Since I usually grade papers at home I’ll have to fire up the old copier/printer/scanner. Those should be published!!!
And if English instructors really looked like that I’ll bet my husband would have learned something about grammar – well, on second thought, he probably wouldn’t have. But he definitely would have gone to class more.
Aug 27, 2011 @ 15:41:28
I’ve always had nightmares about experiencing a death by frowning!