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The Irony: Religious School Teacher Asked for an ‘Alien Perspective’ Then Punished Creativity

by Charles Butler
November 7, 2025
in Social Issues

High school assignments sometimes require students to think outside the box, but the boundary between “outside the box” and “time-wasting mischief” can be thin, depending on the person grading the paper. For one Roman Catholic school student in the UK, a Religious Education (RE) homework assignment became the stage for a lesson in creativity versus compliance.

The teacher asked the class to write a 2–3 page perspective of world religions “as if we had just discovered the planet as an alien.” The Original Poster (OP) took this idea, the concept of true alien perspective, quite literally.

Instead of writing in plain English, he invented a whole new alphabet, translated his essay, and submitted the finished piece with a decoder. The result was not the academic praise he had hoped for. He was given two days of detention. The whole ordeal highlights the pain when an educator chooses bureaucratic convenience over a flash of brilliance.

Now, read the full story:

The Irony: Religious School Teacher Asked for an 'Alien Perspective' Then Punished Creativity
Not the actual photo

AITA for throwing away a whole pot of chili out of spite?

I am not sure that this post qualifies, as it didn't end well for me.

Back when I was in high school, I used to go to a Roman Catholic school, here in the UK. We had a rather irate RE (Religious Education) teacher.

One Friday, we were set homework to write two to three pages, describing world religions as if we had just discovered the planet as an alien.

I set to work and wrote it out on the Friday evening. Then I had a thought.

If I were writing this from the perspective of aliens, then it wouldn't be in English. Foolish me.

I came up with a symbol for each letter of the alphabet, and re-wrote the entire thing with these symbols.

Monday morning rolls around, and I handed it in, with a decoder, of course.

I ended up in detention for two days. I also understand I probably wasted that teacher's time when they just wanted to read and grade.

But part of me wanted to get some kind of credit for the extra effort.

Oh well, sometimes compliance isn't all roses.

It is a familiar classroom dilemma: Did the OP engage in an act of sophisticated academic compliance or a mild-mannered act of rebellion? We tend to believe it was the former. When a teacher asks a student to imagine an extreme new perspective, they should expect an extremely creative interpretation.

The assignment was asking for divergent thinking, the exact kind of thinking that produced the OP’s meticulously coded essay. Instead of acknowledging the effort, the teacher defaulted to bureaucracy.

The lesson the student learned was that adhering to the convenient process matters more than embodying the insightful spirit of the request. It is a moment of pure creative ignition that got snuffed out by an overly strict grade book.

The teacher’s reaction highlights a genuine, documented issue within many standardized school systems: the penalty for creativity. The punishment here wasn’t for incorrect answers; it was for the administrative inconvenience caused by an overly correct answer.

In reality, the OP’s ingenuity placed him far outside the norm. This kind of standardized conformity has serious educational consequences. Research surrounding the Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking (TTCT) showed that American students’ creativity scores began declining in the 1990s, an effect linked to an increased emphasis on standardized testing and educational compliance.

When the system prioritizes easy grading and conforming to narrow rubrics, genuine imaginative problem-solving gets penalized.

The teacher wanted the appearance of creative thinking, not the actual work of grading it.

Dr. Yong Zhao, an internationally recognized educational theorist, once noted a critical distinction that educators often miss. “In schools, we focus so much on compliance that we forget that learning is inherently a creative, messy process.”

When an assignment asks for an alien perspective and a student creates a fictional alien alphabet, the process is certainly messy, but it perfectly models the exact kind of high-level problem-solving the teacher should have rewarded.

By handing down detention, the teacher effectively punished the OP for solving a problem in a way that had not been explicitly sanctioned. This approach teaches students to think what the teacher wants them to think, instead of teaching them how to think.

A great teacher recognizes that “extra effort” on a homework assignment is a golden opportunity to nurture deep, engaged learning. This teacher unfortunately saw a two-day annoyance instead of a valuable spark.

Check out how the community responded:

The vast majority of users sided with the student, acknowledging his sheer cleverness and mocking the teacher’s lack of humor.

CivicLiberties - Some people have no sense of humor. I think you did an excellent job.

wombat929 - Maybe you got detention for substandard fictional language practice. One to one letter conversion? Unlikely. Just kidding. That is very creative and the teacher sounds like a humorless...

yellowjacket81 - Yeah I think this was pretty clever. You probably should have also submitted a "clean" version because nobody is going to hand-decode it, but this definitely wasn't worth...

Other Redditors shared similar tales of academic audacity, showing how this spirit of playful rebellion is often met with mixed results.

Measurex2 - I did something similar in high school with the pretext I was a member of a previously uncontacted nationality. I gave her a coded copy with a decoder.

Teacher gave me a B+ with comment in my language. I read through all of them and a comment near the end said.

"If you acknowledge this was annoying by Friday then I'll give you an A." Mrs Faye could give as good as she took.

Computant2 - I had a similar school story, but the teacher was happy about it. History teacher broke the class into two teams of "archeologists,"

and had us create artifacts for the other team to figure out. I wrote a page long letter and then assumed that the letter C had been replaced as redundant.

The teacher said it was a god example of how hard translating old languages can be, and how important the Rosetta stone was.

NonchalantSavant - Reminds me of a post I once saw containing student homework assignments. The student was to ". ..assume the role of a Chinese

immigrant in 1870 and write a letter home describing your experience." Yeah, the letter to home was handwritten in Chinese. A+ if I were the teacher.

The most astute comments questioned the irony of the subject matter and the school’s response, especially in a Catholic school setting.

[Reddit User] - Damn, why [are] catholic teachers so angry?! The [terror] I experienced from the nuns at school.

ambisinister_gecko - A religious school teacher asked you to write about Christianity from an alien perspective?

That seems like a really strange project, that lends itself more easily to critical views of religion than friendly ones.

How to Navigate a Situation Like This

If you or a student are faced with an assignment that invites extreme creativity, a lesson can be taken from the user comments. The detention here was likely avoidable if the student had been able to manage the bureaucratic friction point.

Always submit two versions. The creative, fully realized version that showcases your original idea, and the “clean,” easily readable version that an irate teacher can grade in under three minutes. This respects their schedule while preserving your creative output.

Alternatively, send a brief email to the teacher beforehand, outlining your innovative approach and asking for explicit approval. Say, “I want to fully commit to the alien perspective and plan to submit the essay written in an original cipher with a decoder. Is this okay, or would you prefer a clean copy for ease of grading?” By doing this, you manage expectations and prevent the assignment from becoming a confrontation over a simple font choice.

The final note is bittersweet. The student learned a valuable life lesson about compliance trumping creativity in bureaucratic settings, but at the expense of a moment of genuine academic fun. The story is a cautionary tale about the educational pressure to be conventionally smart, rather than unconventionally brilliant. It will be the stories of the detentions that last far longer in memory than the actual Religious Education essay itself.

What act of rebellious genius got you punished in school? Did a teacher ever reward you for being too creative?

Charles Butler

Charles Butler

Hey there, fellow spotlight seekers! As the PIC of our social issues beat—and a guy who's dived headfirst into journalism and media studies—I'm obsessed with unpacking how we chase thrills, swap stories, and tangle with the big, messy debates of inequality, justice, and resilience, whether on screens or over drinks in a dive bar. Life's an endless, twisty reel, so I love spotlighting its rawest edges in words. Growing up on early internet forums and endless news scrolls, I'm forever blending my inner fact-hoarder with the restless wanderer itching to uncover every hidden corner of the world.

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