No kidding. I'm hoping to land in some small little school that noone's heard of and teach. I like the research, but only if I can apply it somehow to either the classroom or some actual field use.Not to sound like a frosh, but what's your major? I'm in PRTM.
12/1/2005 2:09:39 PM
Middleton never read my term paper, he just wrote a grade on it and comments that did not apply.
12/1/2005 3:41:58 PM
There's always the stair technique. Stand at the top with a bunch of papers and let em fly. Grades depend on the step they land on./efficient
12/1/2005 3:48:25 PM
I like it!I mean, the longer the paper, the heavier it will be; thus making it travel further down the stairs!
12/1/2005 4:29:07 PM
Piled Higher and Deeper. That's me. More like Post Hole Digger if I don't get my shit in gear.
12/1/2005 4:35:12 PM
12/1/2005 5:21:23 PM
yeah
12/1/2005 5:28:29 PM
Holy crap, MathFreak was ... funny? jbtilley, is that true of all NC employees, where there are no performance raises and strictly standard state raises? I thought there was a differentiation between faculty and staff?[Edited on December 1, 2005 at 6:15 PM. Reason : .]
12/1/2005 6:14:44 PM
12/1/2005 8:21:35 PM
At a research intensive place like State, GT, etc, the research is by far the most important thing. I've got some friends that have recently started tenure-track positions where their tenure is based almost totally on research dollas brought in and publications. Smaller schools are getting into this as well. Traditionally strong teaching instituitons are chasing the money and presitige of super-star research at the expense of their primary mission. That's a damn shame.I seriously considering teaching in a community college when I get out if my small mystery-school postion doesn't pan out.
12/1/2005 9:06:26 PM
Perlith, I just found something in the policies about how they do get "merit based salary increases"http://www.ncsu.edu/policies/employment/rpt/archive-rpt/RUL05.67.1-archiveasof-10-2001.php
12/2/2005 8:11:14 AM
The Department at State just forwarded me teaching evaluations from my spring class at State. Before you say that I write what I write below because I'm pissed let me say that the evaluations are overall positive. Not "OMF you're so awesome" positive, but the average is roughtly 3.0.But1. Nobody except one person wrote word comments. I'll assure you if instructors read your comments at all, they'll just read your verbal comments. Bubble questions are too vague to be informative.2. Some people lie in their bubble answers. Whether or not someone was an effective teacher is in the eyes of beholder. But whether or not s/he started the class on time or returned graded work ina reasonable manner really isn't. If somebody returns homeworks next class, you MUST "strongly agree" that papers were returned promptly. Any other answer in this situation is a lie. Similarly you cannot be neutral about accessibility of your instructor if you've never been rejected byt he instructor.In summary, if you view evaluations as a reason to vent, fine. But if you want teachers to pay attention to what you say, you gotta at least amke an effort to be objective and specific.
12/6/2005 12:11:24 PM