Saturday, December 31, 2005

Frosty Fran Lights a Fire.
A community college professor in the liberal arts in a cold state sends these along:
"Mr. Smith"
Attention Span: like a puppyIntelligence: doubtfulArrogance: Significant
If you want a fight on your hands, make a comment that this student's one-paragraph, 3 page long paper is "poorly written." He'll tell you that the writing is fine; it is just a problem of form.
"Ms. Waterworks"
Ability to comprehend: doubtfulFuture career: grocery store clerkOpinion of herself: way higher than she deserves
Crying seems to work on other people, but not on me. The fact of the matter is that you didn't want to take the late penalty for your paper with the missing golden paragraphs, and you didn't like the grade the paper got without them. Next time I have a couple of suggestions: 1) get your shit together. 2) Don't tell your professor that this paper got an A in your Sociology class.
"Ms. Florida"
Attendance: just enough to stay in the classIntelligence: my dumb cat is smarterJudgement: poor
This one wants to leave in the middle of the 75 minute class, and doesn't realize that it is a disruption every time. I'm sure you "had to" go on vacation in Florida with your "family" Thanksgiving week -- which must not include your own SISTER, who is also in my class and was in class that week.
"Mr. ADD"
Attention Span: shorter than any student I've hadJudgement: poor
If you like students who are disruptive and want to watch "Family Guy" DVDs on their computers in class, this one is for you.
"Voldemort"
Hygiene: poorIntegrity: lowSnarkyness: high Watch out for this one.
He'll cut you down with administration behind your back while smiling at you. He wants to be a politician and if all things are equal, he'll end up a used car salesman. Avoid small-group situations with this one.
"Mr. Smith"
Attention Span: like a puppyIntelligence: doubtfulArrogance: Significant
If you want a fight on your hands, make a comment that this student's one-paragraph, 3 page long paper is "poorly written." He'll tell you that the writing is fine; it is just a problem of form.
"Ms. Waterworks"
Ability to comprehend: doubtfulFuture career: grocery store clerkOpinion of herself: way higher than she deserves
Crying seems to work on other people, but not on me. The fact of the matter is that you didn't want to take the late penalty for your paper with the missing golden paragraphs, and you didn't like the grade the paper got without them. Next time I have a couple of suggestions: 1) get your shit together. 2) Don't tell your professor that this paper got an A in your Sociology class.
"Ms. Florida"
Attendance: just enough to stay in the classIntelligence: my dumb cat is smarterJudgement: poor
This one wants to leave in the middle of the 75 minute class, and doesn't realize that it is a disruption every time. I'm sure you "had to" go on vacation in Florida with your "family" Thanksgiving week -- which must not include your own SISTER, who is also in my class and was in class that week.
"Mr. ADD"
Attention Span: shorter than any student I've hadJudgement: poor
If you like students who are disruptive and want to watch "Family Guy" DVDs on their computers in class, this one is for you.
"Voldemort"
Hygiene: poorIntegrity: lowSnarkyness: high Watch out for this one.
He'll cut you down with administration behind your back while smiling at you. He wants to be a politician and if all things are equal, he'll end up a used car salesman. Avoid small-group situations with this one.





IT WASN'T SO BAD! I've been dreading these interviews since my first year in grad school, but I just came from a (supposedly) dreaded hotel-room interview and it was great. A little school from the Pacific Northwest greeted me warmly at their Marriott suite - and it was phat - and we had a relaxed 65 minute meeting that went better than expected. They asked about my dissertation at the start, but then moved on to teaching concerns. Luckily for me I've had a chance to teach pretty broadly over my last 2 years and I felt so comfortable with them that when they asked about a class I'd never even thought of teaching, my answer of "I don't know how I'd handle that. But I'd love to know how you folks deal with it," was met with smiles and a really honest answer. THE MLA ROCKS!

























