@bethsmiles and other teacher types: you might appreciate this (or maybe it'll cause you to tear out your hair)
I'm the teaching fellow for an honors level course at my university. Our class has almost 120 students, and a great deal of them are pre-med because of course. The normal professor for this course is wonderful, but we have a visiting scholar this semester who was required to teach, so she's teaching the course instead. Because of the language barrier (she's from Europe) and because she's basically a new professor here teaching someone else's course, the class has kind of devolved into a mediocre course at best.
That being said, I am getting very frustrated with the students. The entire point of discussion, which I teach, is that we are learning to read scientific papers. I'm leading the paper discussions, and I come in with questions I've written up to help them understand the paper. I've told them from the start, the goal is for them to start doing this kind of legwork on their own, and by the end of the semester, they should be able to lead the discussions almost entirely on their own.
We're halfway through the semester, and I am appalled by how badly everyone prepares for discussion. I ask the same damn questions about every figure (like, "What was the goal of this figure?"), and when I ask, five papers into the course, no one has bothered to try to answer the question on their own. There are terms that no one bothered to look up. After class, I get a ton of people saying, "Well, I wasn't sure what this meant, so I wanted to wait till after discussion to ask," as if I don't have an email address.
What's more, they all focus on completely pointless stuff and resist every attempt I make to get back on track. We end up not being able to finish the papers every week because no one is prepared and they're all asking legitimately pointless questions.
Tonight has been the last straw for me. There is a quiz next week. It'll be easy, and they already know what'll be on it. So naturally, no fewer than 10 students have asked to meet with me for an hour (separately from office hours) to "go over the papers." I've started telling them that no, I no longer have time for an appointment, so they can email me with questions or come to office hours. Here is a general exchange I had this evening:
Student: Can we meet next week on Monday or Tuesday to go over the papers before the quiz?
Me: I'm sorry, but I don't have time. If you can't make it to office hours on Tuesday, feel free to email me your questions.
Student: Oh, well, I can't come to office hours. Is it okay if I reread the papers and then send you concrete questions?
I replied politely, but I'm fuming right now. You should reread the papers BEFORE you would meet with me. You should have concrete questions BEFORE you would meet with me. Meeting with me should be reserved for when you actually can't make heads nor tails of a paper, not when you just want a refresher or a personal tutoring session from the TF.
Ladies, I've had enough and I'm joining the circus.
now with ~* INCREASED SASSINESS *~
