Anonymous wrote:Confident happy professors: First name or doctor or professor, as long as you're polite, it's okay.
Insecure nobodies with lurking mental disorders: CALL ME PROFESSOR OR DOCTOR, PERIOD!
Ok, so have the student dock their pay...let's see how that worksAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder if OP has ever had a job.
That's an ironic question. The professors and university support staff are the employees in this situation, are they not?
first name usage is predicated on familiarity....if the person doesn't consider you a familiar, stick to an appropriate term until they doAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Professor [Last Name]"
How is this hard? lol
Nothing hard about it. It's just unnecessarily formal and nobody can explain why an adult calling another by their first name is "rude" (because it's not, unless you're a nutjob egomaniac).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Confident happy professors: First name or doctor or professor, as long as you're polite, it's okay.
Insecure nobodies with lurking mental disorders: CALL ME PROFESSOR OR DOCTOR, PERIOD!
I have literally never called a doctor, teacher, or professor by their first name in my entire life. I can't be alone here? Even nurses, for that matter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder if OP has ever had a job.
That's an ironic question. The professors and university support staff are the employees in this situation, are they not?
Anonymous wrote:Confident happy professors: First name or doctor or professor, as long as you're polite, it's okay.
Insecure nobodies with lurking mental disorders: CALL ME PROFESSOR OR DOCTOR, PERIOD!
Anonymous wrote:I wonder if OP has ever had a job.
Anonymous wrote:Confident happy professors: First name or doctor or professor, as long as you're polite, it's okay.
Insecure nobodies with lurking mental disorders: CALL ME PROFESSOR OR DOCTOR, PERIOD!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a former professor, I can tell you why it annoys me when students called me by my first name. The same students invariably call my husband “Professor.” It was just another way women are given less respect than their male peers.
Another female Professor here and this is one reason I insist on formality
Sounds like you're projecting an internal insecurity onto innocuous actions. That's on you, not the young adults who pay you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Professor [Last Name]"
How is this hard? lol
Nothing hard about it. It's just unnecessarily formal and nobody can explain why an adult calling another by their first name is "rude" (because it's not, unless you're a nutjob egomaniac).
Many people have explained this - because they are not peers. While technically an 18 year old is a legal adult, as the title of this thread itself suggests, many, including the OP, actually consider them kids. But go ahead and have this view. Go ahead and encourage your child to use first names and informality. Just don't be surprised when it offends some.
OP's daughter thought it was o.k., she said, based on what some of the faculty had told her. O.K. A couple of them set her straight. I doubt she'll make that mistake again. Funny the OP hasn't come back to defend why she thought the faculty member and advisor were "rude."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a former professor, I can tell you why it annoys me when students called me by my first name. The same students invariably call my husband “Professor.” It was just another way women are given less respect than their male peers.
Another female Professor here and this is one reason I insist on formality