Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:David Foster Wallace preferred teaching at Illinois State University to Pomona, where he went after being offered an endowed faculty Chair
What do you expect them to say? "These kids are lazy underachievers, very few actually read the assigned material, plagiarism is rampant, and lectures are like talking to a wall."
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Well he made the comment after he left the "directional" university and while held an endowed professorship at a selective Liberal Arts college, so I'm not sure what his incentive would have been to celebrate his previous students over his current ones other than it was probably true
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:David Foster Wallace preferred teaching at Illinois State University to Pomona, where he went after being offered an endowed faculty Chair
What do you expect them to say? "These kids are lazy underachievers, very few actually read the assigned material, plagiarism is rampant, and lectures are like talking to a wall."
![]()
Well he made the comment after he left the "directional" university and while held an endowed professorship at a selective Liberal Arts college, so I'm not sure what his incentive would have been to celebrate his previous students over his current ones other than it was probably true
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My uncle is a prof at MIT and he hates his students and teaching: he hates ALL his students, and not because they aren’t bright, but because they take up his time. His love and focus is his research. Teaching and interacting with students are something he tolerates for the purpose of being able to conduct his research. Disclaimer: my uncle is brilliant but most certainly on the spectrum, but so are most of his colleagues at MIT. I went to Harvard and had some amazing professors who truly cared about teaching and liked interacting with students, but also knew some who clearly viewed teaching as a necessary evil to be tolerated if one wanted space and the arena to write and then publish in one’s field.
I suspect that many professors like teaching well enough, but would happily limit their teaching time or give it up if they could do so without losing their place at a university. People who enjoy teaching more than research/writing/publishing in their field do not become university professors, they become…teachers.
No, they become professors at SLAC's, which emphasize teaching (unlike R1 universities).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My uncle is a prof at MIT and he hates his students and teaching: he hates ALL his students, and not because they aren’t bright, but because they take up his time. His love and focus is his research. Teaching and interacting with students are something he tolerates for the purpose of being able to conduct his research. Disclaimer: my uncle is brilliant but most certainly on the spectrum, but so are most of his colleagues at MIT. I went to Harvard and had some amazing professors who truly cared about teaching and liked interacting with students, but also knew some who clearly viewed teaching as a necessary evil to be tolerated if one wanted space and the arena to write and then publish in one’s field.
I suspect that many professors like teaching well enough, but would happily limit their teaching time or give it up if they could do so without losing their place at a university. People who enjoy teaching more than research/writing/publishing in their field do not become university professors, they become…teachers.
It's interesting that you say that, because at least within research schools, the better researchers also *tend* to be the better teachers. There are top teachers who are less productive, and there are top researchers who despise teaching, but overall they are definitely positively correlated. How do I know? I've been on performance review committees where we have to assess both research and teaching performance, and I have a big old spreadsheet of hundreds of people's ratings over years
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My uncle is a prof at MIT and he hates his students and teaching: he hates ALL his students, and not because they aren’t bright, but because they take up his time. His love and focus is his research. Teaching and interacting with students are something he tolerates for the purpose of being able to conduct his research. Disclaimer: my uncle is brilliant but most certainly on the spectrum, but so are most of his colleagues at MIT. I went to Harvard and had some amazing professors who truly cared about teaching and liked interacting with students, but also knew some who clearly viewed teaching as a necessary evil to be tolerated if one wanted space and the arena to write and then publish in one’s field.
I suspect that many professors like teaching well enough, but would happily limit their teaching time or give it up if they could do so without losing their place at a university. People who enjoy teaching more than research/writing/publishing in their field do not become university professors, they become…teachers.
No, they become professors at SLAC's, which emphasize teaching (unlike R1 universities).
Anonymous wrote:My uncle is a prof at MIT and he hates his students and teaching: he hates ALL his students, and not because they aren’t bright, but because they take up his time. His love and focus is his research. Teaching and interacting with students are something he tolerates for the purpose of being able to conduct his research. Disclaimer: my uncle is brilliant but most certainly on the spectrum, but so are most of his colleagues at MIT. I went to Harvard and had some amazing professors who truly cared about teaching and liked interacting with students, but also knew some who clearly viewed teaching as a necessary evil to be tolerated if one wanted space and the arena to write and then publish in one’s field.
I suspect that many professors like teaching well enough, but would happily limit their teaching time or give it up if they could do so without losing their place at a university. People who enjoy teaching more than research/writing/publishing in their field do not become university professors, they become…teachers.
Anonymous wrote:My uncle is a prof at MIT and he hates his students and teaching: he hates ALL his students, and not because they aren’t bright, but because they take up his time. His love and focus is his research. Teaching and interacting with students are something he tolerates for the purpose of being able to conduct his research. Disclaimer: my uncle is brilliant but most certainly on the spectrum, but so are most of his colleagues at MIT. I went to Harvard and had some amazing professors who truly cared about teaching and liked interacting with students, but also knew some who clearly viewed teaching as a necessary evil to be tolerated if one wanted space and the arena to write and then publish in one’s field.
I suspect that many professors like teaching well enough, but would happily limit their teaching time or give it up if they could do so without losing their place at a university. People who enjoy teaching more than research/writing/publishing in their field do not become university professors, they become…teachers.
Anonymous wrote:My uncle is a prof at MIT and he hates his students and teaching: he hates ALL his students, and not because they aren’t bright, but because they take up his time. His love and focus is his research. Teaching and interacting with students are something he tolerates for the purpose of being able to conduct his research. Disclaimer: my uncle is brilliant but most certainly on the spectrum, but so are most of his colleagues at MIT. I went to Harvard and had some amazing professors who truly cared about teaching and liked interacting with students, but also knew some who clearly viewed teaching as a necessary evil to be tolerated if one wanted space and the arena to write and then publish in one’s field.
I suspect that many professors like teaching well enough, but would happily limit their teaching time or give it up if they could do so without losing their place at a university. People who enjoy teaching more than research/writing/publishing in their field do not become university professors, they become…teachers.