bumbershoot
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2007
- Messages
- 69,750
I did read the last post of the OP. But this is what I thought as I read through the whole thing. 
Agreed.
And from I know from my own education, and helping DS as I homeschool with him, is that very little learning is up to the teacher at all. Some teachers can spark something in a student, and those are the teachers that are lauded. But teachers don't cram the info into a head and cause the magic of learning to happen. All they can do is make the info available and perhaps interesting, and all the work, the magic, is done in the student.
Is it?
One would hope that the students would say something.
Wowzers, you have a very high opinion of professors! I went to a small private university that touted itself as the Harvard of the West in the 80s (in the 70s it was one of Playboy's top party schools, though) and I'm pretty sure we had some very good profs, but I never met one like that description. My brother and his wife went to Duke, and until SIL got to Duke Law I'm not sure either of them had a prof like that, either.
It's like it because that's the case.
I've often thought that DH could change his name legally to mine then take over my "piece of paper". Even though it has nothing to do with his field, the fact of him having a piece of paper from a university would raise his pay and afford him more opportunities without so much *proving himself*. He regularly advises engineers in his job (software), they regularly say that he knows more than them, but he never even got his AA. And he comes in under their salaries because of his lack of a paper. (no they shouldn't talk salary but they ALL do)
This is so heinous I cannot even deal with it.
This supposed college is punishing students for what *their parents* are doing. This is reprehensible.
No, you rewarded students with hands off parents.
Did you work at Disney University? That's the sort of response Disney does. These people do xyz, we don't like it, so we're going to destroy everything.
Just change the way you do the waitlist and you don't have to have that bizarre registration experience or filling of the waitlist.
LOL.
Yes.
The one class I remember not getting into when I wanted to be in it, I just went to the prof and told him how hard I would work, etc etc. He let me in. (and then I didn't work hard...ugh)
Weird.
One of two profs I ever had problems with was tenured AND head of the department. Didn't teach, had a HORRIBLE textbook, was a jerk. And then put Beatles trivia as extra credit. For Linear Algebra. (second prof I had a problem with was also tenured and the only organic chem prof at the school. thankfully his curve was so funky, because he wasn't actually teaching, that my 50% was a B-, so I drop-passed his class and took organic elsewhere, from a good teacher with a good textbook, and got As) Failed that class, took it next semester from a different, non-tenured prof, with a different textbook...passed it.
Sometimes it's the tenured ones you have to watch out for...
It was already cleared up what she was referring to, but really? you think that there are NO unprofessional people in elementary schools? I'm glad YOUR school doesn't, but it's just silly to think that everyone at every school everywhere is professional and does their job well.
Alas, that does sometimes happen.
OR (or and/or) it could have just been the wheels of bureaucracy turning slowly, as enough students put in official complaints...
That's just odd, to change classes based on a weather fluke?
A question that hasn't been asked directly...what do you think she is wanting to happen when she forwards this stuff?
IF her professor is like that, WHEN you tell her that you called, are you going to discuss the fact that by forwarding them it caused you to call, which will then cause the exact thing to happen that she was afraid of happening?
To me, it's kind of a big deal that her actions caused you to call, which *could have* ended up resulting in what she feared.
Is she so nervous about talking that she doesn't talk to the other students? I wonder if she has talked to them? I wonder if other students have contacted the prof and know more?
She's not atypical at all. You're going by stereotypes. Even back when I was in college there were tons of students just like her.
Has *she* discussed the need for a therapist? As has been mentioned, she's an adult, and if she's having more problems SHE must learn that she can take action. Or *ask* you to take action.
I think that the fact that she was merely forwarding emails without, it seems, telling you what her point was in doing that, but you feel that she would NOT want you to take action (but you took action), and she's too anxious to talk to him....would all add up to a big lump of *it's time to get her local help*. It's not about this prof. It's about the whole thing.
Yes.
And it seems like she's going to a really big college. I've never had any diagnosed anxiety etc (then again I've never put myself into a position to BE diagnosed with anything), but I *am* an anxious person. I started college at 17 and was a very young 17. I *chose* to go to a small college in a small town. I was a CA resident and my dad was actually working at University of California Santa Cruz at the time, but I could never (not even now) have gone to that HUGE, giant, massive university. (funnily enough I wanted to go to NYU, but I had *no* comprehension of what that campus was like)
Just the fact of having to take transportation to get to this class would have caused me to not take the class.
Her daughter sends the emails to her.
Alas, they don't always go together. If the girl is highly academically motivated, but still perhaps a bit *young*, she might NOT be reading to handle those things. It's a reason why I was not caused to skip a grade in elementary school, because I was already the second youngest in my grade AND was a bit of a baby. Whereas a friend of mine was younger-for-her-grade than I was and WAS promoted, because she could handle it emotionally. If my teachers hadn't known me so well, though, they might have promoted me and caused all sorts of problems.
That still exists? Hilarious. And sad.
The thread was started with the concept of it being about the prof missing class.
The answer COULD HAVE BEEN "and what did he say when your daughter asked him what was going on?", but it wasn't and couldn't be that because the MOM is the one contacting them.
It rightfully moved on.
Many of us who went to college *don't mind* a prof not having class for awhile. Many of us would ask him/her what's up. If we felt it was inappropriate, we would have gone to the person we should have gone to. But many of us wouldn't, because we never felt it was a huge deal to miss class.
This mom think there's no method to address it because her daughter isn't giving her the info. The daughter must know where to take the inquiries. She's just not wanting to. And there could be all sorts of communication between the prof and OTHER students, but the daughter either doesn't know or hasn't talked about it with her mom.
Agreed.
She said it was 2 days a week.
How is it taking it easier? A person who responded before you knows a student with one day of classes. How is having classes ALL day *easy*?
87-91 I knew many people who chose their majors based on when their classes would be. Economics classes were usually later afternoon and NEVER on Fridays. Science classes were early morning. English and Philosophy started around 11am. etc.
Classes cannot all be held at the same time. So some people end up with schedules that seem easier than others.
I would assume that the other students had discussed it with higher-ups.
I wonder if you, however, are assuming that you were the cause of this?
Oh gracious I hope she's right *for her teachers*. Because some of MY teachers certainly would have tested you on material that hadn't been given!

most "learning" at the college level is something the student is expected to do independently of the professor.
Agreed.
And from I know from my own education, and helping DS as I homeschool with him, is that very little learning is up to the teacher at all. Some teachers can spark something in a student, and those are the teachers that are lauded. But teachers don't cram the info into a head and cause the magic of learning to happen. All they can do is make the info available and perhaps interesting, and all the work, the magic, is done in the student.
Cancelling this many classes is absolutely unacceptable and unprofessional.
Is it?
How would the University even know if a professor is cancelling classes at the last minute?
One would hope that the students would say something.
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?
Wowzers, you have a very high opinion of professors! I went to a small private university that touted itself as the Harvard of the West in the 80s (in the 70s it was one of Playboy's top party schools, though) and I'm pretty sure we had some very good profs, but I never met one like that description. My brother and his wife went to Duke, and until SIL got to Duke Law I'm not sure either of them had a prof like that, either.
It very much feels like you pay your $80,000 (or more), suffer through 4 years, and then at the end, get a piece of paper that puts you in exactly the same position as everyone else.
It's like it because that's the case.
I've often thought that DH could change his name legally to mine then take over my "piece of paper". Even though it has nothing to do with his field, the fact of him having a piece of paper from a university would raise his pay and afford him more opportunities without so much *proving himself*. He regularly advises engineers in his job (software), they regularly say that he knows more than them, but he never even got his AA. And he comes in under their salaries because of his lack of a paper. (no they shouldn't talk salary but they ALL do)
All offices (financial aid, bursar, registrar, deans, department chairs, etc) had access to student files. We requested that IT add a field for us called M&D - Mommy & Daddy. Each time a parent called in for something their adult child should be handling, we put an X in this field. At registration time, priority was given to those students with no or few Mommy & Daddy Xs, as we felt it was a nice reward for those who took responsibility for themselves & their own education. M&D was reset each semester to allow for personal growth.
This is so heinous I cannot even deal with it.
This supposed college is punishing students for what *their parents* are doing. This is reprehensible.
So, we registered at our discretion and chose to reward students who showed personal responsibility.
No, you rewarded students with hands off parents.
Some courses are in such high demand that students were registering for seats they did not need and then selling their seat in a desirable section or with a favored professor to other students for hundreds of dollars. They would meet, pay, and then drop/add simultaneously. To combat this, those courses required manual registration.
Did you work at Disney University? That's the sort of response Disney does. These people do xyz, we don't like it, so we're going to destroy everything.
Just change the way you do the waitlist and you don't have to have that bizarre registration experience or filling of the waitlist.
Thank goodness we have the braintrust of the IT dept to steer the ship.
LOL.
You've made me really grateful for the way we handle things . . .
Yes.
The one class I remember not getting into when I wanted to be in it, I just went to the prof and told him how hard I would work, etc etc. He let me in. (and then I didn't work hard...ugh)
This, and more, occur at schools with highly privileged populations on a daily basis.
Alphabet within grade level. Second-semester seniors first and so on down to freshmen.
Weird.
We did have a problematic professor. Lots of complaints. Turns out (not to slam tenure) that due to tenure, it was not simple to deal with.
One of two profs I ever had problems with was tenured AND head of the department. Didn't teach, had a HORRIBLE textbook, was a jerk. And then put Beatles trivia as extra credit. For Linear Algebra. (second prof I had a problem with was also tenured and the only organic chem prof at the school. thankfully his curve was so funky, because he wasn't actually teaching, that my 50% was a B-, so I drop-passed his class and took organic elsewhere, from a good teacher with a good textbook, and got As) Failed that class, took it next semester from a different, non-tenured prof, with a different textbook...passed it.
Sometimes it's the tenured ones you have to watch out for...
It's not my job to try to interpret another poster's insult. She said an unprofessional act was something she would "expect to see in an elementary school, not college", so I rightly defended elementary school professionals.
It was already cleared up what she was referring to, but really? you think that there are NO unprofessional people in elementary schools? I'm glad YOUR school doesn't, but it's just silly to think that everyone at every school everywhere is professional and does their job well.
Well they started to care when they heard from a bunch of parents, some who happened to be big donors as well. That is when the class changed.
Alas, that does sometimes happen.
OR (or and/or) it could have just been the wheels of bureaucracy turning slowly, as enough students put in official complaints...
Boston College told us last year when we were touring they were working really hard to figure out how to reschedule their Monday classes. They got hit with all their big storms on Sundays and Mondays. They were working on getting those kids into the classroom to learn. I was impressed by that
That's just odd, to change classes based on a weather fluke?
My daughter receives the emails and has forwarded them to me.
A question that hasn't been asked directly...what do you think she is wanting to happen when she forwards this stuff?
She didn't want to say anything at the time because she was afraid the professor would give her a bad grade.
IF her professor is like that, WHEN you tell her that you called, are you going to discuss the fact that by forwarding them it caused you to call, which will then cause the exact thing to happen that she was afraid of happening?
To me, it's kind of a big deal that her actions caused you to call, which *could have* ended up resulting in what she feared.
Is she so nervous about talking that she doesn't talk to the other students? I wonder if she has talked to them? I wonder if other students have contacted the prof and know more?
It's a 300 level course in her major. She is very academic focused. She isn't your typical young adult at college who likes to get involved in clubs, parties, social events, etc. You can find her at the library or studying. She places her own pressures with maintaining a high GPA.
She's not atypical at all. You're going by stereotypes. Even back when I was in college there were tons of students just like her.
We haven't done our due diligence in exploring options while she is away. I don't know if this particular situation with the professor not showing up warrants us pressing the panic button.
Has *she* discussed the need for a therapist? As has been mentioned, she's an adult, and if she's having more problems SHE must learn that she can take action. Or *ask* you to take action.
I think that the fact that she was merely forwarding emails without, it seems, telling you what her point was in doing that, but you feel that she would NOT want you to take action (but you took action), and she's too anxious to talk to him....would all add up to a big lump of *it's time to get her local help*. It's not about this prof. It's about the whole thing.
If she had a lot of anxiety living at home, taking medication, and seeing someone, it makes sense that her anxiety is going to skyrocket now that she isn't living at home and isn't seeing anyone. Get her some services NOW!
Yes.
And it seems like she's going to a really big college. I've never had any diagnosed anxiety etc (then again I've never put myself into a position to BE diagnosed with anything), but I *am* an anxious person. I started college at 17 and was a very young 17. I *chose* to go to a small college in a small town. I was a CA resident and my dad was actually working at University of California Santa Cruz at the time, but I could never (not even now) have gone to that HUGE, giant, massive university. (funnily enough I wanted to go to NYU, but I had *no* comprehension of what that campus was like)
Just the fact of having to take transportation to get to this class would have caused me to not take the class.
overseeing and monitoring via the emails
Her daughter sends the emails to her.
This student is taking 300 level classes. Certainly by now she should be competent in handling basic day to day classroom issues herself, without over involvement from home.
Alas, they don't always go together. If the girl is highly academically motivated, but still perhaps a bit *young*, she might NOT be reading to handle those things. It's a reason why I was not caused to skip a grade in elementary school, because I was already the second youngest in my grade AND was a bit of a baby. Whereas a friend of mine was younger-for-her-grade than I was and WAS promoted, because she could handle it emotionally. If my teachers hadn't known me so well, though, they might have promoted me and caused all sorts of problems.
your other happy place discussion board
That still exists? Hilarious. And sad.
No she shouldn't.
There is no obligation to post every item of an inquiry. I have seen this before. "Oh, why are you only now telling us this detail." Sometimes it is used to bring doubt to the posters credibility. "You never told us that before, so why should we believe you now." Baloney. We briefly post here for information, advice, amusement. During the process of discussion, new information and ideas come out.
More importantly, it is nothing to do with the questionable policies of the university, which is what this thread is about (or should have been).
The thread was started with the concept of it being about the prof missing class.
The answer COULD HAVE BEEN "and what did he say when your daughter asked him what was going on?", but it wasn't and couldn't be that because the MOM is the one contacting them.
It rightfully moved on.
Many of us who went to college *don't mind* a prof not having class for awhile. Many of us would ask him/her what's up. If we felt it was inappropriate, we would have gone to the person we should have gone to. But many of us wouldn't, because we never felt it was a huge deal to miss class.
I think that refers to a professor being permitted to cancel classes 4 weeks in a row with seemingly no method to address even justifiable reasons for doing so.
This mom think there's no method to address it because her daughter isn't giving her the info. The daughter must know where to take the inquiries. She's just not wanting to. And there could be all sorts of communication between the prof and OTHER students, but the daughter either doesn't know or hasn't talked about it with her mom.
Agree. Maybe you could grant some of that same grace to the professor. I find it highly unlikely that he is cancelling that often without a really good reason.
Agreed.
Is this class only one day a week? I can't imagine a 300 level class being one day a week.
She said it was 2 days a week.
I'm shocked at the number of kids I know who have made it through most of college without ever taking a class on a Friday. Just another beef of mine when it comes to education. They seem to be making it easier on the students.
How is it taking it easier? A person who responded before you knows a student with one day of classes. How is having classes ALL day *easy*?
87-91 I knew many people who chose their majors based on when their classes would be. Economics classes were usually later afternoon and NEVER on Fridays. Science classes were early morning. English and Philosophy started around 11am. etc.
Classes cannot all be held at the same time. So some people end up with schedules that seem easier than others.
they became aware of the fact that an unacceptable number of the sessions had been cancelled
I would assume that the other students had discussed it with higher-ups.
I wonder if you, however, are assuming that you were the cause of this?
she said, but they don't test you over material that hasn't been given to you.
Oh gracious I hope she's right *for her teachers*. Because some of MY teachers certainly would have tested you on material that hadn't been given!