I also asked him, weren't the Senegalese pissed off that the Gambians claimed both sides of the river? He told me that wasn't them, it was the French and British during colonialism. The Gambians and Senegalese get along fine, and share things like utilities and sports teams.
This bring back memories. I actually worked at an oldies radio station in the mid-80s that played 78s. That meant music from the early 20th century. Songs were only about two minutes long, sometimes less, and I was the only woman on the air staff, so getting to the far away ladies room during a song was a challenge. I eventually gave up and dared into the men's room. Years later, I found myself at another station that actually had a wax/vinyl disc cutter in the equipment storage room. It was from the days when that was the only way to record ads, direct to wax. I'm sure anything recorded there was quite wavy and distorted.
That's not cheating at all. That's "write your own notes out of your head." It sounds like you found a way to make them learn all the stuff they needed, while your students thought they were learning a shortcut!
Way back in the Ice Age when I was a student, I would occasionally find an exam question that was just plain wrong, and I would argue about it. Students who have the exam ahead of time and can't see SEVERAL of them were wrong have obviously not mastered the material at all. Or else they memorized the answer sequence instead of reading it, which seems just as difficult as learning the stuff in the first place.
I wrote it that way because, while the last egg was refrigerated and not powdered, it was still fairly old. The last supply plane they got was around April, I think.
Years later, I found myself at another station that actually had a wax/vinyl disc cutter in the equipment storage room. It was from the days when that was the only way to record ads, direct to wax. I'm sure anything recorded there was quite wavy and distorted.