OK, I emailed my advisor yesterday with a few questions, my teaching statement for him to look over, and asking if there was anything I could do to help with the article we're writing. (Pretty much all the research is done, it's just the writing left. He wants to do the writing himself, but he's taking forever with it, and he said he was considering asking me to finish it.) Today, I emailed him reminding him that he'd said last week that we could probably meet on Wednesday, so I wanted to know if that still worked for him.
Any bets on when I hear back from him?
Do we need #toyotafail? [link]
Hil, I'm thinking after you pester him three more times.
As for the Toyota thing, I am agog. I expect sexism like the Amp thing but this seems horribly misguided, to say the least. Ah, the insanity of social marketing.
"That creep is STILL following me. Strangely, I like his car". Ya, somehow, I don't think so.
I am so tipsy. I tried to order one of those small bottles of champagne that hold about a glass and a half, but I accidentally ended up with a half a bottle just for me.
A B is not a bad grade ... A B is not a bad grade...A B is not a bad grade ... A B is not a bad grade... A B is not a bad grade ... A B is not a bad grade...A B is not a bad grade ... A B is not a bad grade...A B is not a bad grade ... A B is not a bad grade... A B is not a bad grade ... A B is not a bad grade...A B is not a bad grade ... A B is not a bad grade...A B is not a bad grade ... A B is not a bad grade... A B is not a bad grade ... A B is not a bad grade...
A B is most assuredly not a bad grade.
::hugs Empress::
Aims, a B is not a bad grade. Take it from someone who was a straight-A student in high school.
Three C+'s in a row at college. Those were good times.
I hate them. Hate. To me they say, "Good, but not good enough." They are the stepchild of grades.
Dammit, Aims, they are not.
Then again, when I taught, I stuck by the maxim that a C was average, a B was very good work and an A absolutely rocked my world monumentally.
Besides, one grade does not define you, either as a student or as a human.
::says the woman who flunked geometry and was indifferent to any class that didn't interest or engage her::