Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In an MBA program, and as you likely know, businesspeople skew conservative. Fine. I’m taking an economics class, and my professor uses every opportunity to denigrate economic controls, government regulations, etc. He’s described Bernie Sanders as sympathetic to assassins and dismissed the Green New Deal as absurd (which it may be), and of AOC he questions the “wisdom and foresight” of a “29-year-old whose previous work experience was bartending.”
I think it’s one thing to foster healthy, fair debate on issues, but he’s so anti-liberal and frankly anti-government it’s becoming difficult to focus on the lessons. Should I talk to him? Talk to administration? Or just leave it alone?
I'm sure you've seen your fair share of liberal/leftist professors. What did you do in that case?
I have never experienced partisanship on this level - openly broadcast and discussed - by a professor while in class.
The fact of the matter is that partisan political views are NOT germane to 99% of material discussed in economics, political science, philosophy, or history classes. It simply doesn't have a place because it has zero relevance.
In an econ class, you are studying various economical models and the proof-of-work behind each model.
AOC's New Green Deal has zero relevance. And neither does Trump's stance on various issues. I'd be disappointed by a professor who injected any partisan views into a lecture, regardless of party allegiance. Anyone who does so is a small person relishing in the smidge of authority they have over their captive audience of students. Lame.
Anonymous wrote:He probably wants to provoke. I’d probably ignore and mention on his end of term evaluation that his irrelevant political comments were a distraction and took away from focus on the material. If he’s actively hostile to women, say, then I’d go to the admin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In an MBA program, and as you likely know, businesspeople skew conservative. Fine. I’m taking an economics class, and my professor uses every opportunity to denigrate economic controls, government regulations, etc. He’s described Bernie Sanders as sympathetic to assassins and dismissed the Green New Deal as absurd (which it may be), and of AOC he questions the “wisdom and foresight” of a “29-year-old whose previous work experience was bartending.”
I think it’s one thing to foster healthy, fair debate on issues, but he’s so anti-liberal and frankly anti-government it’s becoming difficult to focus on the lessons. Should I talk to him? Talk to administration? Or just leave it alone?
I'm sure you've seen your fair share of liberal/leftist professors. What did you do in that case?
I have never experienced partisanship on this level - openly broadcast and discussed - by a professor while in class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In an MBA program, and as you likely know, businesspeople skew conservative. Fine. I’m taking an economics class, and my professor uses every opportunity to denigrate economic controls, government regulations, etc. He’s described Bernie Sanders as sympathetic to assassins and dismissed the Green New Deal as absurd (which it may be), and of AOC he questions the “wisdom and foresight” of a “29-year-old whose previous work experience was bartending.”
I think it’s one thing to foster healthy, fair debate on issues, but he’s so anti-liberal and frankly anti-government it’s becoming difficult to focus on the lessons. Should I talk to him? Talk to administration? Or just leave it alone?
I'm sure you've seen your fair share of liberal/leftist professors. What did you do in that case?
Believe it or not, the vast majority of liberal-leaning professors don't make blatantly partisan political statements, don't denigrate individual politicians, and don't push radical views about government. It's not germane to the material.
In my experience, most conservatives get triggered by liberal-leaning professors when the class begins the economic or historical analysis of economic and political decisions made by leaders/parties. But, at that point, you're examining historical records and the record is very poor for conservative leaders. Sad.
[b]Or they made blatantly partisan political statements that you wholeheartedly agreed with so didn't even notice?[/b]
Anonymous wrote:report to whom? for what?
he has academic freedom. or at least he should.
--raging leftist
Anonymous wrote:I'd wait til the end of the course.
Anonymous wrote:Unless he lets his views affect his grading of those who disagree, I'd let it go.
While a K-12 teacher pushing a political viewpoint on minors would be completely inappropriate, I think once students are in college they're expected to have the maturity, basic knowledge, and judgement to tolerate exposure to strong viewpoints. Some of these may be conservative, some may be liberal (in today's political climate I'd generally expect more of the latter, but that will vary by institution).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In an MBA program, and as you likely know, businesspeople skew conservative. Fine. I’m taking an economics class, and my professor uses every opportunity to denigrate economic controls, government regulations, etc. He’s described Bernie Sanders as sympathetic to assassins and dismissed the Green New Deal as absurd (which it may be), and of AOC he questions the “wisdom and foresight” of a “29-year-old whose previous work experience was bartending.”
I think it’s one thing to foster healthy, fair debate on issues, but he’s so anti-liberal and frankly anti-government it’s becoming difficult to focus on the lessons. Should I talk to him? Talk to administration? Or just leave it alone?
I'm sure you've seen your fair share of liberal/leftist professors. What did you do in that case?
Anonymous wrote:What are you going to report? He's arguing in favor of capitalism and against regulation, which history has proven works??? You will look like an idiot. Stop judging from a snowflake perspective and you might actually learn something
Anonymous wrote:In an MBA program, and as you likely know, businesspeople skew conservative. Fine. I’m taking an economics class, and my professor uses every opportunity to denigrate economic controls, government regulations, etc. He’s described Bernie Sanders as sympathetic to assassins and dismissed the Green New Deal as absurd (which it may be), and of AOC he questions the “wisdom and foresight” of a “29-year-old whose previous work experience was bartending.”
I think it’s one thing to foster healthy, fair debate on issues, but he’s so anti-liberal and frankly anti-government it’s becoming difficult to focus on the lessons. Should I talk to him? Talk to administration? Or just leave it alone?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In an MBA program, and as you likely know, businesspeople skew conservative. Fine. I’m taking an economics class, and my professor uses every opportunity to denigrate economic controls, government regulations, etc. He’s described Bernie Sanders as sympathetic to assassins and dismissed the Green New Deal as absurd (which it may be), and of AOC he questions the “wisdom and foresight” of a “29-year-old whose previous work experience was bartending.”
I think it’s one thing to foster healthy, fair debate on issues, but he’s so anti-liberal and frankly anti-government it’s becoming difficult to focus on the lessons. Should I talk to him? Talk to administration? Or just leave it alone?
I'm sure you've seen your fair share of liberal/leftist professors. What did you do in that case?
Believe it or not, the vast majority of liberal-leaning professors don't make blatantly partisan political statements, don't denigrate individual politicians, and don't push radical views about government. It's not germane to the material.
In my experience, most conservatives get triggered by liberal-leaning professors when the class begins the economic or historical analysis of economic and political decisions made by leaders/parties. But, at that point, you're examining historical records and the record is very poor for conservative leaders. Sad.
Bwahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!
Yeah. I'll choose NOT.