The Wizarding Council's Official Examiners

March 23, 2009 3:01 PM
Two weeks of examinations was bad by almost anyone's standards, but when they came along with the name 'Ridiculously Anal Testing of Skills' they took on a whole new aspect. Examination timetables had been handed out a fortnight beforehand, so no one could legitimately claim to be caught unawares of when their exams were to be held. The hall had been rearranged for the exams and the waterfalls silenced. At the front of the room the examiners sent by the council conferred quietly (except in the case of one wizard) while waiting for the students to arrive and settle into their appointed seats.

Two of the examiners required no introduction. David Weatherby and Bernard Starsky had been at Sonora only the week before, examining the fifth years taking their CATS, and were almost certainly still familiar to the seventh years from when they'd taken their own CATS. Nothing much had changed since the week past, although Starsky had started to favour his right leg somewhat. It seemed, beyond all reason, that this had also caused his vocal volume to increase. Alongside the two wizards, the final examiner, Aurora Septentrion, looked far more feminine. It helped that she was a witch. A little below average height, her blonde hair fell loose down her back, although with such order that it was almost certain that there was a crafty charm at work keeping it neat and untangled. A pair of elliptical spectacles was perched on her nose, framing her light blue eyes. She didn't smile, at least not in this environment; Septentrion took her work and responsibilities seriously.

The specially designed examination quills were handed out once the students had found their seats, and papers and examination booklets were placed on every desk by the younger two examiners. The third watched all with a suspicious eye, keeping a close eye on the time.

"This," Starsky bellowed at the students without preamble, "is the first of your RATS examinations. We expect you to take them seriously and not to do anything dishonest. That means no cheating. No distracting others taking examinations. And no cheating." He engorgio'd his clockwork stopwatch and charmed it to stick to the front wall. "You will start when the second hand reaches the top, and you have two hours and thirty minutes to complete the paper. Begin."

This was, of course, only the beginning. Written examinations were being held of a morning and after a generous hour and a half break for lunch - and, undoubtedly, practice. And cramming - practicals for the same subject took place in the afternoon, although in a one-on-one format with the examiners. This would continue over the next two weeks while every subject taught at Sonora was covered. It was long and grueling, but at least once it was done there was the concert to look forward to.

OOC: Same as with the CATS, pick your examiner - from those mentioned in the post - for the practicals. Good luck.
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0 The Wizarding Council's Official Examiners The Ridiculously Anal Testing of Skills (7th years) 0 The Wizarding Council's Official Examiners 1 5


Connor Pierce

April 06, 2009 12:08 AM
Though it was more opulent than most and more magical than almost all, there were some things in which Sonora Academy was kind of like any other prep school. Its students had a uniform and curfew, were answerable to residence directors of a sort, had to attend and pass at least some classes to stay in the school, and had pretty much the same messed-up cliques as every other school in America.

One respect in which Sonora was both like and unlike normal high schools was its testing. On one hand, Muggles had high stakes testing. His sister was taking AP Biology and Psych, and they were about to drive her crazy. On the flip side... Beverly was doing that of her own free will. She could have taken Advanced courses intead and still gotten a decent job and had a normal life. If Connor didn't take the exams with the worst name in the history of exams, his options were to wash dishes forever or announce his parentage at one of the sick Carey reunions Gwen had told him about. Neither option really appealed to him.

So here he was. RATS. Never mind that he still had no clue what to do with his life; the important part was to finish his RATS. Once he saw what he had the credentials to do in the Wizarding World, he could go about picking a career to get into. He'd heard dumber plans; his brother had gone to Maryland as an Education major, of all things, and changed it up about five times before settling on Psych because it was what his then-girlfriend, now-fiancee Lynn was into.

Care of Magical Creatures was up first, and Connor was more than a little reluctant to see how the practical for it was going to work. They had never worked with the more advanced creatures outside of the Mirage Chamber, and for very good, valid reason: the real things were likely to eat them. That would take care of the crisis of I-don't-know-what-I-should-do-with-my-life, but he wasn't keen to try it for about the same reason he wasn't considering going to a Carey reunion. He was a lot of things, but suicidal wasn't one of them.

The written section wasn't, all things considered, too bad; he thought he might have even come close to full credit for the essay question about dragon reservations. It caused one of those moments when he was half-sure the past seven years had been a dream - he was seriously writing an essay, for a grade, about dragon reservations? Wasn't it supposed to be about global warming or something? - but deciding the best thing to do would be to plow on anyway served as proof that it was all real; decisions didn't get made that way in dreams.

Luckily, the practical did not involve dragons, manticores, or anything else that could potentially eat him and his old proctor before they could do anything about it, and the day got to end on a pretty high note. Maybe RATS wouldn't be so bad after all.
0 Connor Pierce Pity CATS didn't eliminate the RATS 68 Connor Pierce 0 5


Connor Pierce

April 06, 2009 12:40 AM
Charms was easily Connor's biggest class. Apparently, being able to do charms was to wizards as being able to drive was to Muggles: the next thing to a necessity. You could, if it was absolutely impossible for you to learn, survive without the skill, but life would be a lot harder unless you had an obscene amount of money to fall back on.

Instead of being worried about the practical, Connor's main concern was the written, theoretical portion of the exam. A cornerstone of his problems with Transfiguration had always been the difficulty he had with complex theories, and upper-level charms had a few tricky ideas behind them, too. If an ability to extrapolate on the technicalities of a charm was a big part of his grade, he was finished.

It did feature, but not as heavily as it might have; if the practical didn't go hideously, he was sure he had scored in the passing range. He spent most of lunch and the wait time before the proctors got to his area of the alphabet working on a few last-minute charms. Most were simple, but who knew what the proctors would ask? They only had seven long years of material to draw from.

In the end, Connor was convinced they somehow drew from all seven. One minute, he was being asked to levitate a bust of Paracelsus; the next, he had to perform Geminio, a spell he hadn't been that great at when they covered it in class. As his locomotive charms were also a little weak, his attempts at making a teapot dance for the first time in years failed to be a pretty sight, too. In the end, though, he still had a feeling he'd passed, which was enough. Os would have been nice, but if he could just live through two weeks of tests, he could live without them.
0 Connor Pierce Skipping the RATS-related puns this time. 68 Connor Pierce 0 5