Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To all the "have a heart" poster: Ok, let's say Professor Hardass tells your son that he isn't late because he turned it in at 11:59:50. I guess that's ok. But what about Braden who turned it in at 12:00:00? I guess that's ok too. And oh! Kaylee turned it in at 12:00:02 but she started to submit at 11:50 and her internet was slow because her little brother was gaming so please is it ok? Also, Kayleigh's grandmother was sick (not the grandmother that was sick in April, or the one in May, the third grandmother) so that's why she turned it in at 2am thanksssssss for understanding and also is there any extra extra credit because she didn't get a chance to do the first extra credit.
Do you see how this goes? Hard lines (with exceptions made for DOCUMENTED accommodations and emergencies) are more fair to more students, and take the biases and weirdness out of jurying constant student exception requests, which I assure you, are free flowing and often very creative. I can also assure you that the last majority of us are being pretty liberal this semester with grades, and that I am almost certain if your son doesn't like his grade he can take a P instead of the letter.
Prof Hardass would need to prove his 11:59 time stamp is actually the “correct“ time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh, sweetie. Your precious would not last one day at West Point or the Naval Academy.
Not.
One.
Day.
Who cares.
Their philosophy department is set up to teach their students to shoot to kill on the order. They don’t want soldiers questioning things in the battle field. Any other philosophy departments anywhere else in the world, they are allowed to question why killing is morally permissible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To all the "have a heart" poster: Ok, let's say Professor Hardass tells your son that he isn't late because he turned it in at 11:59:50. I guess that's ok. But what about Braden who turned it in at 12:00:00? I guess that's ok too. And oh! Kaylee turned it in at 12:00:02 but she started to submit at 11:50 and her internet was slow because her little brother was gaming so please is it ok? Also, Kayleigh's grandmother was sick (not the grandmother that was sick in April, or the one in May, the third grandmother) so that's why she turned it in at 2am thanksssssss for understanding and also is there any extra extra credit because she didn't get a chance to do the first extra credit.
Do you see how this goes? Hard lines (with exceptions made for DOCUMENTED accommodations and emergencies) are more fair to more students, and take the biases and weirdness out of jurying constant student exception requests, which I assure you, are free flowing and often very creative. I can also assure you that the last majority of us are being pretty liberal this semester with grades, and that I am almost certain if your son doesn't like his grade he can take a P instead of the letter.
Prof Hardass would need to prove his 11:59 time stamp is actually the “correct“ time.
Of course. But the beauty of a leaning management system is that it does it for you automatically.
We are questioning the accuracy of Prof Hardass’ computer time.
The point is that it isn't Prof Hardass' computer time. It is Google Classroom's computer time, or Blackboard's computer time. Besides, in the Year of Our Lord 2020, I guarantee the professor put "according to Blackboard" or whatever in the syllabus.
Anonymous wrote:Oh, sweetie. Your precious would not last one day at West Point or the Naval Academy.
Not.
One.
Day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Am I the only one that wants this sort of structure for my kid? These are lessons he needs to learn before he’ll ever be ready to hold any sort of meaningful job.
No. But this was a misunderstanding/computer glitch. Anyone who says 11:59 means before midnight. OP’s kid complied. But got burned anyway. The lesson for such a situation is that in cases like this, you advocate for yourself, politely and forthrightly.
Anonymous wrote:Oh, sweetie. Your precious would not last one day at West Point or the Naval Academy.
Not.
One.
Day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a chronic illness that requires me to spend 50% of my existence in the bathroom. I understand chronic illnesses can be rough. But let me tell you now, it never made a difference between me submitting something at 11:59 and 11:59:01.
If his illness was the reason for the delay, it still shouldn’t have come down to a game of minutes.
Professors don’t budge on stuff. It’s how they turn teenagers into adults. It’s unfortunate, but he will recover from this grade dip.
Thank you for this.
As I said, DS takes full responsibility for submitting last minute as he failed to ask for more time. He doesn't blame his illness for the delay.
The only reason why he is considering appealing the professor's decision is that if the deadline is 11:59pm, should something that is submitted at 11:59 be late?
Yes the prof should have accepted it. But he might not believe your son. If I were your son I’d write the tech dept that programs the deadline and ask them if it should have been programmed 11:59:59. Ignore the jerks who say you are helicoptering.
Anyone on A DCUM education forum is helicoptering.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To all the "have a heart" poster: Ok, let's say Professor Hardass tells your son that he isn't late because he turned it in at 11:59:50. I guess that's ok. But what about Braden who turned it in at 12:00:00? I guess that's ok too. And oh! Kaylee turned it in at 12:00:02 but she started to submit at 11:50 and her internet was slow because her little brother was gaming so please is it ok? Also, Kayleigh's grandmother was sick (not the grandmother that was sick in April, or the one in May, the third grandmother) so that's why she turned it in at 2am thanksssssss for understanding and also is there any extra extra credit because she didn't get a chance to do the first extra credit.
Do you see how this goes? Hard lines (with exceptions made for DOCUMENTED accommodations and emergencies) are more fair to more students, and take the biases and weirdness out of jurying constant student exception requests, which I assure you, are free flowing and often very creative. I can also assure you that the last majority of us are being pretty liberal this semester with grades, and that I am almost certain if your son doesn't like his grade he can take a P instead of the letter.
Do you see how petulant it is to make these impactful conditions based on technicalities that are insignificant to the educational process?
The only reason to do it is for stigginit to the student. If that’s what floats your boat, then have at it. Yes, it will teach the kid a good lesson: how to deal with an absolute asshole of a boss.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To all the "have a heart" poster: Ok, let's say Professor Hardass tells your son that he isn't late because he turned it in at 11:59:50. I guess that's ok. But what about Braden who turned it in at 12:00:00? I guess that's ok too. And oh! Kaylee turned it in at 12:00:02 but she started to submit at 11:50 and her internet was slow because her little brother was gaming so please is it ok? Also, Kayleigh's grandmother was sick (not the grandmother that was sick in April, or the one in May, the third grandmother) so that's why she turned it in at 2am thanksssssss for understanding and also is there any extra extra credit because she didn't get a chance to do the first extra credit.
Do you see how this goes? Hard lines (with exceptions made for DOCUMENTED accommodations and emergencies) are more fair to more students, and take the biases and weirdness out of jurying constant student exception requests, which I assure you, are free flowing and often very creative. I can also assure you that the last majority of us are being pretty liberal this semester with grades, and that I am almost certain if your son doesn't like his grade he can take a P instead of the letter.
Prof Hardass would need to prove his 11:59 time stamp is actually the “correct“ time.
Of course. But the beauty of a leaning management system is that it does it for you automatically.
We are questioning the accuracy of Prof Hardass’ computer time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To all the "have a heart" poster: Ok, let's say Professor Hardass tells your son that he isn't late because he turned it in at 11:59:50. I guess that's ok. But what about Braden who turned it in at 12:00:00? I guess that's ok too. And oh! Kaylee turned it in at 12:00:02 but she started to submit at 11:50 and her internet was slow because her little brother was gaming so please is it ok? Also, Kayleigh's grandmother was sick (not the grandmother that was sick in April, or the one in May, the third grandmother) so that's why she turned it in at 2am thanksssssss for understanding and also is there any extra extra credit because she didn't get a chance to do the first extra credit.
Do you see how this goes? Hard lines (with exceptions made for DOCUMENTED accommodations and emergencies) are more fair to more students, and take the biases and weirdness out of jurying constant student exception requests, which I assure you, are free flowing and often very creative. I can also assure you that the last majority of us are being pretty liberal this semester with grades, and that I am almost certain if your son doesn't like his grade he can take a P instead of the letter.
Prof Hardass would need to prove his 11:59 time stamp is actually the “correct“ time.
Of course. But the beauty of a leaning management system is that it does it for you automatically.
We are questioning the accuracy of Prof Hardass’ computer time.