Uh, nope. Try again. Sure, maybe some colleges are open, MAYBE staffed 24/7, but at the college I was at, you could not get into the computer lab on weekends, or in the evening. My girlfriend's college had only one on her entire campus that was open 24 hours a day, and it was unstaffed, just had a student sitting at a desk.SRanney wrote: 1/ College and university computer labs are readily available for your use and have all programs installed that you will need to complete your assignment. Many are open (and staffed) for 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Of course, you are welcome to purchase any materials that you feel the need to, but these resources are included in your (exorbitantly high) tuition. Please take advantage of them. Alternatively, download any freeware that you think would be helpful to your studies. No, we probably do not use it on computers in our offices because we are often limited to installing software given to us by the campus computer cops.
But it is up to the professor to decide if they want to cave in to these requests. Some professors can use Powerpoint well, some can't. Not all of us are lazy.SRanney wrote: 2/ Lots of you like pretty pictures and prefer that faculty give you or post online the notes you should have taken in class. As a result, many faculty have chosen to use a program called PowerPoint to convey graphical and textual material to you that you should have received in class. While PowerPoint may seem obtrusive to many, the program is installed on most (if not all) of the computers on campus referenced in point 1 immediately above. PowerPoint slide shows can easily be converted into a .pdf document using the program itself or any other number of "freeware" programs. Converting a .ppt slideshow to .pdf will allow you to view the slideshow without having to install PowerPoint. Ask the computer lab staffers how to do this. These resources are included in your (exorbitantly high) tuition.
But, shouldn't it also be required that you are familiar with the website as well, so that you are able to tell whether it will actually help or do any good to the students?SRanney wrote: 3/ Textbooks are expensive. Most of us would rather not force you to buy the $125 20lb tome, but according to the curriculum developers, we are required to use this in our class. Also, sorry about the whole pay-per-semester website thing. Apparently, the new generation of students ("the millenials") demands instant access, instant feedback, lots of colorful pictures, and instant gratification. The only way we can provide these instant resources for you is to require you to use the website of the publisher.
I've had a professor that wouldn't do the copy thing, and was getting impatient about waiting for the book to arrive while she knew that I had it on order. Additionally, this professor had done good ol' bloke's #4.SRanney wrote:4/ If you can find a better price for the textbooks we require you to use, by all means buy the textbook at the lower price. Just tell us during the first week of class that your textbook (which you purchased for less than half of what the university bookstore is selling it for) hasn't arrived yet. We'll be more than happy to let you photocopy (at the cost of your time and expense, and only when it is convenient for us) the necessary pages out of our book until yours arrives. This does not, however, mean that you can just "borrow" our copy indefinitely.
But you as the professor should be familiar enough with the book to know what the changes are, if there are any significant changes in the book. We shouldn't have to buy a new book JUST BECAUSE THE PAGE NUMBERS CHANGED, addition of these "pretty pictures" you claim that we like, or just because the pictures did change.SRanney wrote: 5/ Publishers can really suck some times. Please don't blame us when the publishers of a text book come out with a new version. We really can't do anything about it.
I graduated in '09 from college and my girlfriend is currently in college. Neither of us really care about these "pretty pictures" you claim we do. And I've gotten highly frustrated with the change of books that the class does just for the heck of it. The books that I had to buy in college, I haven't even touched since college, save for my woodwind repair manual, but I actually find that book useful. Every other book I had to use in college would barely be useful to line a bird cage. When I went to sell my useless books back to the bookstore worth $$$ each new, they would only buy one back and only gave me $ for it.
so uh...many things, in my experiences, that SRanney said aren't necessarily true.
tubaguy "who just finished koledge and has a girlfriend in kolej" 9