Xander: Am I right, Giles? Giles: I'm almost certain you're not. Though, to be fair, I haven't been listening.

'Sleeper'


Natter 54: Right here, dammit.  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


shrift - Oct 10, 2007 11:12:55 am PDT #5976 of 10001
"You can't put a price on the joy of not giving a shit." -Zenkitty

I am occasionally fortunate enough to have a Kathy or a Shrift in among the rabble

I've mentioned it here before, but I think my honesty was so refreshing that my professors would give me breaks for things because I wouldn't ask for them. One prof let me take a make-up exam because I said, "Look, I wasn't feeling well and slept through my alarm, but I don't expect special treatment for being a flake."

Having a reputation for not weaseling out of my work came in handy when I got mono my junior year and couldn't get out of bed for 6 weeks.


Dana - Oct 10, 2007 11:15:37 am PDT #5977 of 10001
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

Having a reputation for not weaseling out of my work came in handy when I got mono my junior year and couldn't get out of bed for 6 weeks.

Can you believe I've known you since your junior year?

I need it to be 45 minutes later so I can GO HOME.


sarameg - Oct 10, 2007 11:17:27 am PDT #5978 of 10001

I was like that, shrift. Though I could probably have been less honest the time I told a prof that his class just wasn't a high enough priority for me to bust my ass for (it was crunch time on my thesis.) I guess it surprised him enough (I mean, what kind of idiot SAYS that?!) that he actually got really worried about me. I was under pressure, yes, but keeping it dealable just meant chucking a few things. I wasn't on the verge of collapse or anything.


Steph L. - Oct 10, 2007 11:23:10 am PDT #5979 of 10001
I look more rad than Lutheranism

My niece is going to be Cinderella [link] for Halloween and I'm thinking of sending a costume for my nephew. What could be be that would coordinate?

A pumpkin?

Eeee! With wheels on the side, so that he's her carriage!


Matt the Bruins fan - Oct 10, 2007 11:26:32 am PDT #5980 of 10001
"I remember when they eventually introduced that drug kingpin who murdered people and smuggled drugs inside snakes and I was like 'Finally. A normal person.'” —RahvinDragand

I'm not sure how that would have flown with the professor of the one class I blew off, but I did make a conscious decision to coast for a C in his class so I could devote 25+ hours a week to studying for Survey of Art History II. At least I did crack him up by talking about the Creamy Consistency Rule for acrylic paint mixing.


Rick - Oct 10, 2007 11:27:13 am PDT #5981 of 10001

-- he used to just want a research 1 institution (he is on the market this year), but his experience (and mine, I went to a school like the ones above) has made him warmly welcome a job at places like that.

Yeah, I'm in a Research 1 university, and I often daydream about being in a smaller school like the one I attended. But in the sciences it's hard to work outside of Research 1, because you need a lab and lots of graduate students, and Federal grants, and collaborators who you can team up with.

In the humanities, though, I think it's possible, as long as you have access to the information you need and can connect with other scholars at converences or by exchanging visits. I envy the people who are able to strike that balance.


shrift - Oct 10, 2007 11:28:01 am PDT #5982 of 10001
"You can't put a price on the joy of not giving a shit." -Zenkitty

Can you believe I've known you since your junior year?

...it doesn't seem like it's been that long, does it?


megan walker - Oct 10, 2007 11:45:43 am PDT #5983 of 10001
"What kind of magical sunshine and lollipop world do you live in? Because you need to be medicated."-SFist

To defend my fair profession, I think this has a lot more to do with how many more students are going to college from lower-achieving schools, which often have too many students and too few qualified teachers to have any kind of sustained writing program...
But I don't think it's fair to say that we aren't preparing them as well as we used to.

Kristin,
I totally agree and I hope you don't think I was faulting high school education as a whole.

And generally I think it's great that more people have access to higher education than in the past. It just sucks that they aren't really prepared for it and then, as a prof, your job becomes something else entirely. But then again, at my last school, we couldn't force people to go to the writing center even if they did have a problem so possibly I'm still just really bitter about that.

In related news, public vs. private education: [link]


amych - Oct 10, 2007 11:54:22 am PDT #5984 of 10001
Now let us crush something soft and watch it fountain blood. That is a girlish thing to want to do, yes?

In related news, public vs. private education:

Interesting, and I'd really like to see more teasing out of the different factors affecting science/math performance on the one hand and reading/history on the other (with the understanding that that sort of thing may be somewhere down the road in future studies).

ION, could they have FOUND a less appropriate commentator for the article than Mr. Cato Institute Guy?


Pix - Oct 10, 2007 12:04:13 pm PDT #5985 of 10001
The status is NOT quo.

Kristin,
I totally agree and I hope you don't think I was faulting high school education as a whole.
And generally I think it's great that more people have access to higher education than in the past. It just sucks that they aren't really prepared for it and then, as a prof, your job becomes something else entirely.

Yes indeed. I don't judge your frustration, really, and I know that you aren't faulting all of high school education. I'm sorry if it felt like I was lashing out at you; I really didn't intend that at all. I just hear statements about how unprepared college students are because of shoddy high school education a lot, and many people don't make the distinction that you do. I guess I just want the general public to understand that it isn't the preparation that has changed so much as the access to college education. And yeah, that's a mixed blessing.

Blah. I'm also exhausted and cranky, which is no one's fault but my own. Hugs, babe. We're totally good.