Missed a final exam -- what happened?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My DS has a final tomorrow at 7:30-9:30am on the other side of his HUGE campus. He is so worried about missing alarm, he said he hears it for his earliest class - which is 10:40am but worried that at 6:30am he may not. I said just turn it up really loud and tell your roommate to bug you if he hears it. Time to be adult - but secretly I am worried too!!


I was just chatting with my DC and he said he is happy he doesn’t have an early exam this semester, because he was so worried he would sleep through when he had one in the fall. He said he set about 6 different alarms.
Anonymous
My experience is that they allow make ups in undergrad, but we had zero flexibility in law school. Grades are so important they assumed that everyone was gaming the system.

In law school, a friend was hit by a car, with permanent paralysis, and was in a medically induced coma in the ICU for two weeks at the end of a semester and missed exams. She wanted to make up her exams at the end of the summer after she'd partly recovered. No dice. She had to retake the whole semester (with the full cost) and graduate late, putting her off cycle for law firm job, which is a huge deal in a bad economy. The same answer was true for a friend who threw out her back right before an exam and the friend who had a stomach bug and puked through the whole exam. Law schools have zero compassion.
Anonymous
Woke up 30 minutes late to the final. Ran to class while students were still taking it. Prof let them join and finish it in their office.
Anonymous
I taught at UMD for years. If a kid had been coming to class, participated in discussions, done all the other assignments, and was polite in how they asked for a new exam, I would always arrange it. I did it many times over the years. Mistakes happen and I understand that. If I had never seen the kid before (which does happen) or they had turned in every assignment late or not at all (which also happens), I wouldn’t offer a make up. I had a student in that last category once and her father called my department chair to demand I offer a make up exam. We both had a good laugh about that.
Anonymous
Well I hate that finals are never the same as when the class is. Very confusing esp for the adhd kiddos.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Well I hate that finals are never the same as when the class is. Very confusing esp for the adhd kiddos.


If a class is an hour long but the final is three, how does that work?
Anonymous
As a freshman I slept through my first ever college final - an 8am bio final. A hallmate woke me up having just finished it quickly and said “Wake up! You slept through the test. But I noticed you weren’t there and talked to the professor saying you must have slept through your alarm and they said if you get there NOW you can still take it.” I hauled ass and it was fun…slow test takers were still there. She and I weren’t even really friends. Always grateful for that.

Once another time I wrote a great test essay in response to one of the books we read, walked out, and realized the prompt was about another book (I’d just liked the one so much I had it on the brain). I ran back to the professor and explained and she was like “Uhh, are you busy? You can write the real essay now.” So I did.

I was a good student. Those are the only first year of college blips I recall.

Now I’m the professor. I try to be kind and fair and reasonable. I will add that this is why it pays to speak up in class and go to office hours once or twice for a substantive reason: sometimes it’s hard to help a student if the first time you hear their voice or make eye contact or receive an email is when they ask for a favor.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Well I hate that finals are never the same as when the class is. Very confusing esp for the adhd kiddos.


If a class is an hour long but the final is three, how does that work?


This.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I still have this nightmare many many years later.



Me too! Or that I somehow forgot to attend every class of the term, and show up on the day of the final, unprepared.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Well I hate that finals are never the same as when the class is. Very confusing esp for the adhd kiddos.

ADHD kiddos are offered to take their exams, with extra time, in a different location separate from their class as it is. That IS the accommodation.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Professor here: I’m at a large public R1 and wouldn’t definitely allow a student to take the exam under those circumstances.


Given what people are paying, you are basically stealing from them by making them retake an entire class due to one missed test.
Anonymous
Thank you to all the teachers and professors who have extended a 2nd chance to students who made mistakes. Thank you for not making that one mistake turn into a huge, costly penalty.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Ugh. Can I add my child's story and ask for some advice? This kid slept through and missed the last class which offered some points for required attendance. Because of this, the expected grade is lowered from B+ to B, as the grade was on the cusp. Is it worth asking for Professor's leniency? DC does have a 504.


If your child is in college, he doesn't have a 504, although he may have specific accommodations. It's doubtful that being allowed to sleep through class is one of the accommodations.

If he's in high school with a 504, why didn't you wake him up?

At any rate, I wouldn't say anything because getting a B instead of a B+ is not a big deal.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Professor here: I’m at a large public R1 and wouldn’t definitely allow a student to take the exam under those circumstances.


Wouldn't or would?


Sorry, should be would

Oops.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:This is absolute nightmare fuel for many people. I guess it must happen in real life for an unlucky few. Everyone else just has terrible dreams about it!


Just reading the OP is giving me a serious panic attack, 🤣
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