Anonymous wrote: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.
This is my child’s honor chem teacher with a reputation for never having anything on her tests that was actually covered in class. Kids drop it in droves first semester.
But somehow kids end up doing well. It really needs to be only the brightest that should be taking and passing honors classes. For kids who drop classes like this it the first time they’ve actually found a class with academic rigors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Organic chemistry is hard? Who knew?
This was especially interesting in light of discussions over Covid learning loss:
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/03/us/nyu-organic-chemistry-petition.html
“Students were misreading exam questions at an astonishing rate,” he wrote in a grievance to the university, protesting his termination. Grades fell even as he reduced the difficulty of his exams.
The problem was exacerbated by the pandemic, he said. “In the last two years, they fell off a cliff,” he wrote. “We now see single digit scores and even zeros.”
After several years of Covid learning loss, the students not only didn’t study, they didn’t seem to know how to study, Dr. Jones said.
Sounds like an awful professor. Good riddance.
Anonymous wrote: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.
This is my child’s honor chem teacher with a reputation for never having anything on her tests that was actually covered in class. Kids drop it in droves first semester.
But somehow kids end up doing well. It really needs to be only the brightest that should be taking and passing honors classes. For kids who drop classes like this it the first time they’ve actually found a class with academic rigors.
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.
This is my child’s honor chem teacher with a reputation for never having anything on her tests that was actually covered in class. Kids drop it in droves first semester.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If other professors were teaching the same course but seeing different results then the problem was the professor. It is likely that students did not gain the math skills or other foundations necessary to do well prior to the class. However if other professors were able yo recognize this, provide a different level of instruction and address it while this one could not then firing him made sense.
Many professors do not really teach. They reuse the same lectures and variations of tests year after year, They don’t watch or measure the performance of their students to see if they are teaching effectively. This is frankly always a problem but after the pandemic it can’t be ignored.
Exactly.
I do think that the professor wasn't the cause of the problem, the cause is the entire education system. But we all have to deal with the impacts of the pandemic, professors included.