Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Orgo has ALWAYS been a weed out class--from medical school and from chemistry as a major. When I took it, the average was a C.
I don't know the specifics of this guy but it's hardly new for many people to fail organic chemistry.
A “C” is, by definition, average.
would you go to just an "average" doctor?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1 where is due process? Why not give the Professor a warning or probation period?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The inmates are running the asylum.
This. We’re in a race to the bottom. Shame on the administration.
My guess is that bc he wasn't tenured, NYU wasn't bound by due process and administrative law procedures. I admit I didn't read the full article, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Orgo has ALWAYS been a weed out class--from medical school and from chemistry as a major. When I took it, the average was a C.
I don't know the specifics of this guy but it's hardly new for many people to fail organic chemistry.
A “C” is, by definition, average.
would you go to just an "average" doctor?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As someone with a PhD who has taught at major universities, I thought this story had something in it for everyone's grievances - whiny entitled Gen Z kids, snowplow parents, learning loss during Covid, college admissions with TO, universities designed for 'customer service' instead of learning, contingent faculty (he was on contract, e.g., adjunct.)
But for my money the fact that he's 84yo says it all. Even geniuses need to retire. Btw the end of mandatory retirement for professors is destroying academia. No one with tenure ever leaves. 50 years ago, 80% of faculty were tenure or tenure track. Today only 25% are. That means 3/4 of professors in the US have zero job security and really lousy pay and minimal or no benefits at all. And meanwhile tuition is stratospheric. Broken system.
If tuitions are stratospheric and most professors get lousy pay and minimal or no benefits at all, where did the money go?
Anonymous wrote:As someone with a PhD who has taught at major universities, I thought this story had something in it for everyone's grievances - whiny entitled Gen Z kids, snowplow parents, learning loss during Covid, college admissions with TO, universities designed for 'customer service' instead of learning, contingent faculty (he was on contract, e.g., adjunct.)
But for my money the fact that he's 84yo says it all. Even geniuses need to retire. Btw the end of mandatory retirement for professors is destroying academia. No one with tenure ever leaves. 50 years ago, 80% of faculty were tenure or tenure track. Today only 25% are. That means 3/4 of professors in the US have zero job security and really lousy pay and minimal or no benefits at all. And meanwhile tuition is stratospheric. Broken system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The inmates are running the asylum.
This. We’re in a race to the bottom. Shame on the administration.
This is why we need to overturn the affirmative action.
How is this related???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The inmates are running the asylum.
This. We’re in a race to the bottom. Shame on the administration.
This is why we need to overturn the affirmative action.
How is this related???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reminds me of one of my classes. None of the questions in the tests matched what was covered in the lectures or textbook. It was the most interesting class but grade wise it was the worst. To this day I remember her lectures, she was brilliant. And a terrible test writer.
It's definitely possible that this is what's happening, just like it's possible that the kids are complaining about tests that are appropriately difficult. It's really hard to say without having taken the class and taken the exams, so it becomes this Rorschach test that reveals whatever you already think about what's happening in colleges, but nothing else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Orgo has ALWAYS been a weed out class--from medical school and from chemistry as a major. When I took it, the average was a C.
I don't know the specifics of this guy but it's hardly new for many people to fail organic chemistry.
A “C” is, by definition, average.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This isn't surprising at all to me as a STEM HS teacher. We always have students who lack the prereq skills, don't do what they're supposed to do, take classes that are simply too hard for them and then make demands along the lines of "what extra credit do you offer because I need to get my grade to at least a ____". The blank is usually an A or a B, and the student is usually scoring two grades below that.
Or they'll come to you and say "I don't understand what you're teaching/you're going too fast/if you taught it differently I would understand so can you change what you're doing/no one else understands what you're teaching" because they've talked to two similarly situated friends who are failing and have no idea that the class average is a C.
On top of which, our district has open enrollment and there's always a fraction of students who were told to take a lower-level class who disregard teacher recs and select classes they can't handle, and then gripe about them.
There was a thread on DCUM recently in the private school forum where people were saying public schools were than private better bc there was no "gatekeeping" or prerequisites for AP classes,
Anonymous wrote:This isn't surprising at all to me as a STEM HS teacher. We always have students who lack the prereq skills, don't do what they're supposed to do, take classes that are simply too hard for them and then make demands along the lines of "what extra credit do you offer because I need to get my grade to at least a ____". The blank is usually an A or a B, and the student is usually scoring two grades below that.
Or they'll come to you and say "I don't understand what you're teaching/you're going too fast/if you taught it differently I would understand so can you change what you're doing/no one else understands what you're teaching" because they've talked to two similarly situated friends who are failing and have no idea that the class average is a C.
On top of which, our district has open enrollment and there's always a fraction of students who were told to take a lower-level class who disregard teacher recs and select classes they can't handle, and then gripe about them.
Anonymous wrote:+1 where is due process? Why not give the Professor a warning or probation period?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The inmates are running the asylum.
This. We’re in a race to the bottom. Shame on the administration.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Orgo has ALWAYS been a weed out class--from medical school and from chemistry as a major. When I took it, the average was a C.
I don't know the specifics of this guy but it's hardly new for many people to fail organic chemistry.
A “C” is, by definition, average.
Anonymous wrote:+1 where is due process? Why not give the Professor a warning or probation period?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The inmates are running the asylum.
This. We’re in a race to the bottom. Shame on the administration.