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unixronin: Galen the technomage, from Babylon 5: Crusade (Default)
Unixronin

December 2012

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Wednesday, September 28th, 2005 12:07 pm

This guy has a point.  I almost thought he was studying math from one of the same math professors I had at EWU, until I re-read the paragraph and realized he was talking about a teaching assistant.  The professor I have in mind was equally incomprehensible to anyone but a math major.

I think this is a consequence of the tenure system.  Our universities hire professors, and give them tenure, not based on their ability to teach, but based on their ability to do research that brings credit-by-association to the university.  We shouldn't be surprised when they put most of their energy into research and have little time left for teaching, relying instead on their TAs to teach their classes.

Don't get me wrong; I'm not saying all university professors are like this.  I'm not even saying all university math professors are like this.  If I ever decide I can hack going back to school for a masters degree, I'll have to study up and see where [livejournal.com profile] absintheminded is teaching and see if I can do my masters there, so that I can take my math classes from him.  Why?  Because the man clearly not only loves math, but loves to teach it and have people understand it.

That's the key to teaching.  It's not enough to merely dump information on a set schedule and rely on a TA to parcel it out for you.  If you're not conveying understanding, everyone may as well go home... including you.


(Crossposted to [livejournal.com profile] engineers; article found on Slashdot by [livejournal.com profile] jayguevara)

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Wednesday, September 28th, 2005 10:07 am (UTC)
Ok, now that I've actually read the article, I've got more brain spew.

1. The university certainly should've held the professor accountable for the extra minutes in the class. A 25 minute class (of what should be 50 or 90) is completely inexcusable, and can result in the department or even the university losing its accreditation.

2. The author also demonstrates a complete inability to master the skills of going to school. Are there no tutors? Honestly, he'd get more out of hiring a good tutor than continuing to torture himself with the professor. How about reading the book? Perhaps he should've considered purchasing or borrowing other books.

3. Where the hell is his advisor? That's the first person to ask for help when you're having a systemic problem with your department.

Yes, large, land-grant universities have serious problems in their engineering and science programs which are described here. But, it turns out, there are solutions and ways to get through.