Mr. Kaneko: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Created page with "Mr. Kaneko teaches Functional Object Oriented Programming in addition to other math subjects." |
No edit summary |
||
| (8 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
Mr. Kaneko | {{Infobox teacher|full name=Takeshi Kaneko|preferred name=Mr. Kaneko|department=cte|classes=[[Functional Object Oriented Programming]], [[AP Computer Science Principles]]}} | ||
Mr. Kaneko teaches programming in addition to math subjects. | |||
== Personality and philosophy == | |||
Mr. Kaneko believes the importance of goodwill between students and teachers, saying that it's more important than you would ever expect{{Citation needed}}. Also, he believes that students should prioritize learning over getting good grades, saying that the "grades will come to you" if you are a good student, whereas you will get poor grades if you try only to get good grades without learning. | |||
He does not like video games, therefore do not ever play videogames in his classes! However, given the computer-based nature of his classes, he finds it impossible to eliminate video games. | |||
== Policies and idiosyncrasies == | |||
{{Stub}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Kaneko}} | |||
Latest revision as of 20:10, 19 September 2025
| Full name | Takeshi Kaneko |
|---|---|
| Preferred name | Mr. Kaneko |
| Classes taught | Functional Object Oriented Programming, AP Computer Science Principles |
| Department | CTE |
Mr. Kaneko teaches programming in addition to math subjects.
Personality and philosophy
Mr. Kaneko believes the importance of goodwill between students and teachers, saying that it's more important than you would ever expect[citation needed]. Also, he believes that students should prioritize learning over getting good grades, saying that the "grades will come to you" if you are a good student, whereas you will get poor grades if you try only to get good grades without learning.
He does not like video games, therefore do not ever play videogames in his classes! However, given the computer-based nature of his classes, he finds it impossible to eliminate video games.