I would have been mortified if my mother had called my college to complain about something that I should be dealing with. She's old enough to be living away from home, she is old enough to deal with a problem.
Time to start cutting the apron strings. You need to let her start fighting her own battles. Otherwise, she may expect you to call her boss if she doesn't get a raise.
So, just to ask.....Do you find it acceptable that a professor is essentially stealing our money by not performing what we've hired him to do? How will anyone at the school know this is happening if someone doesn't speak up? The kids sure aren't going to say anything!
FWIW-My daughter has no idea I called the Dean's office and left a complaint. I won't tell her either.
I graduated more than a decade ago, but I still vividly remember the JOY I experienced when I'd walk up to a classroom door and see that class was cancelled for the day lol! And yes, I was paying for it myself.
Looking at this from several directions:
First, yes, this is bad for your daughter, especially if she's going to proceed on to a higher level in this subject (for example, if we're talking about a Chemistry 1 class, even if she passes, she's going to be in trouble when she reaches Chemistry 2). Has your daughter complained about this, or simply mentioned it to you? If she's complaining, I'd recommend that SHE go to the department head -- even if she does it anonymously.
On the other hand, if we're talking about an elective class, and she won't be going on to a higher level, and if she's passing, let sleeping dogs lie. She can collect your grade and move on.
Finally, even if you do complain, the semester's half over. Nothing's going to happen immediately. A safer course of action would be to write a letter of complaint to both the department head and the college dean AFTER the class. It'll be too late for the professor to do anything nasty to your daughter (and no one above the individual class level would do so), but you'll have made your point.
We pay out of state tuition, and my daughter's professor is constantly sending out last minute emails about cancelling class. One reason was he was called out of town, but the rest are vague. I'd say that this semester alone, 7 classes have been cancelled. The class meets two times per week. That is over 3 weeks worth of class cancelled so far, and the semester doesn't end until May!
I called the Dean's office and talked to a young girl who works there. I told her that I was unhappy with the situation and she was going to take my name and number down and have someone get back to me. I wasn't comfortable with that, because I don't want my daughter to get punished for my complaint. She said she would deliver my generic complaint to someone at a manager level.
WWYD? Would you risk giving out your info? Would you expect a refund? Any thoughts/advice would be appreciated.
We pay $20,000 a year for her to get an education. The professor isn't making up any of these cancelled days. I'm angry!![]()
That's rude. I don't think it's too much to ask to have a replacement.
How would that work? Presumably the faculty member is the expert on the topic and who has carefully developed the course, knows its materials/content inside out and is teaching it, right? It's not like high school where you call a professor from the "sub-list" to come in and make them do a worksheet on page 22 without getting out of control.
I think mom was 100% wrong, but to be fair to the daughter, she did not ask her mom to call and has no knowledge that her mom did that. I'm guessing she would be mortified. It doesn't sound like the daughter would ask her mom to do that.