Anonymous wrote:What do you do while you're hanging outside of your advisor's office 3-4 days per week for 3 or 4 hours? You could be doing productive, like research, you know...not just keeping tabs on someone's fictional comings and goings.
Anonymous wrote:I think you should report him just like you would report a teacher in HS for having sex with an 18 year old student.
I think teachers should fall under the same laws as doctors and psychologists... legally they don't but ethically they do.
Yes. This is just another way women are abused in school .... Title IX.
Please report it.
Anonymous wrote:LOL at how many bootlickers in this thread are falling over themselves to defend an authority figure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a professor in a PhD program, and students close my door for meetings all the time. (I never close it because I'm sensitive to power imbalances, secrecy, etc., and I don't want students to feel uncomfortable. But I allow students to close it if they prefer.) I'd say about more than half of my advising meetings have a closed door. Usually, it's because students want to talk about personal stuff--either interactions with other faculty, their own teaching and students, their self-doubts, or their career ambitions and job search. Sometimes they want to question my pointed feedback on a paper or dissertation chapter, and they know they might cry.
At any rate, you asked for reasons why the door may be closed, so those were just a few that came to mind immediately. Honestly, I have one advisee who always closes the door, and our conversations rarely veer into "personal" territory, but she just seems to prefer the closed door. (Maybe it's because my office is on a highly trafficked hallway, and she doesn't want to be distracted by people in the hall or have everyone in the department listening in on our conversation.)
The only part of your description that gives me pause is that these closed-door meetings go on for hours. The longest that my advising meetings usually last is 90 minutes because who's got time for more than that? So, if you're really right that they're in there for hours, that seems strange, but that also seems really long for a sexual encounter, so maybe your internal clock needs to be recalibrated.
OP here: I understand all of this could come occasionally but she's not even working on research yet. She's a 2 second year student. I have caught them at least 3-4 times per week together for 3-4 hours. He forgets meetings other students have told me the same thing.
And here is where you jumped the shark, troll. You're either a liar, a jealous liar or a stalker. The bolded calls you out.
I'd call you a laughingstock but that would be too good for you. If you are who pretend to be on the internet, you're a very entitled man who feels so very annoyed bye a closed door. There are a lot of reasons that doors are closed and as you so admitted, you know nothing.
The way you've titled this thread and the conclusions you have drawn are disgusting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a professor in a PhD program, and students close my door for meetings all the time. (I never close it because I'm sensitive to power imbalances, secrecy, etc., and I don't want students to feel uncomfortable. But I allow students to close it if they prefer.) I'd say about more than half of my advising meetings have a closed door. Usually, it's because students want to talk about personal stuff--either interactions with other faculty, their own teaching and students, their self-doubts, or their career ambitions and job search. Sometimes they want to question my pointed feedback on a paper or dissertation chapter, and they know they might cry.
At any rate, you asked for reasons why the door may be closed, so those were just a few that came to mind immediately. Honestly, I have one advisee who always closes the door, and our conversations rarely veer into "personal" territory, but she just seems to prefer the closed door. (Maybe it's because my office is on a highly trafficked hallway, and she doesn't want to be distracted by people in the hall or have everyone in the department listening in on our conversation.)
The only part of your description that gives me pause is that these closed-door meetings go on for hours. The longest that my advising meetings usually last is 90 minutes because who's got time for more than that? So, if you're really right that they're in there for hours, that seems strange, but that also seems really long for a sexual encounter, so maybe your internal clock needs to be recalibrated.
OP here: I understand all of this could come occasionally but she's not even working on research yet. She's a 2 second year student. I have caught them at least 3-4 times per week together for 3-4 hours. He forgets meetings other students have told me the same thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is she attractive? Are you jealous of this alleged interaction?
No. I am male. He doesn't have time for his other students. It has nothing to do with jealously.
It's all about jealousy. You have the hots for the female student, you are jealous of the prof, and you want to retaliate in a petty underhanded way by making an unsubstantiated accusation. You are a garbage human being.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is she attractive? Are you jealous of this alleged interaction?
No. I am male. He doesn't have time for his other students. It has nothing to do with jealously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who knows if he is cheating, but the fact that here is another young person making accusations without evidence, is a huge problem that is making our society like the Hunger Games, but the prey are adult men. While OP might be onto something, acting on suspicion and not fact is about to ruin a man's life. What if he isn't? What if you found out that she wants to, maybe is pretending to need academic help, says she has anxiety. I know a man who was accused of sleeping with a student. I don't know there was any evidence and you know innocent proven until found guilty, right? Well, that never happened, because he hanged himself a month after, before any trial or formal charges were even filed, in a forest near his house. Hi wife and kids are still alive, and have to move due to stigma. I am not saying he wasn't guilty, but what if he wasn't? Now, OP and her fellow students might be onto something, and here she is ready to ruin a man's life based on a rumor. Did you even occur to op pause and think what if you report this and you are wrong? Even if cleared, his career is ruined forever, his life is ruined forever. How about using your brain to think about the consequences? The way I see it, you are hell bent on making trouble, that says more about you than about possible cheater professor.
Written by a cheater clearly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Been there. Walked in on him soccerballs deep in her. They didn't even hear the door open. It was impressive.
OP here: HAHA is this true?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a professor in a PhD program, and students close my door for meetings all the time. (I never close it because I'm sensitive to power imbalances, secrecy, etc., and I don't want students to feel uncomfortable. But I allow students to close it if they prefer.) I'd say about more than half of my advising meetings have a closed door. Usually, it's because students want to talk about personal stuff--either interactions with other faculty, their own teaching and students, their self-doubts, or their career ambitions and job search. Sometimes they want to question my pointed feedback on a paper or dissertation chapter, and they know they might cry.
At any rate, you asked for reasons why the door may be closed, so those were just a few that came to mind immediately. Honestly, I have one advisee who always closes the door, and our conversations rarely veer into "personal" territory, but she just seems to prefer the closed door. (Maybe it's because my office is on a highly trafficked hallway, and she doesn't want to be distracted by people in the hall or have everyone in the department listening in on our conversation.)
The only part of your description that gives me pause is that these closed-door meetings go on for hours. The longest that my advising meetings usually last is 90 minutes because who's got time for more than that? So, if you're really right that they're in there for hours, that seems strange, but that also seems really long for a sexual encounter, so maybe your internal clock needs to be recalibrated.
OP here: I understand all of this could come occasionally but she's not even working on research yet. She's a 2 second year student. I have caught them at least 3-4 times per week together for 3-4 hours. He forgets meetings other students have told me the same thing.