Atlas
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- Apr 19, 2006
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So as exams rears its ugly heads in our direction, for some of us we begin to question what we have learned so far... and the answer often depends on obviously your own personal effort, but also on the quality of teaching and the sanity of the unit and its structure/material...
Unfortunately, if you land a bad lecturer, there isn't much you can do but grind your teeth and reach for the voodoo doll ... anyone else ever had one that was so monotone and robotic that it seriously made you wonder where is the "off button"? I had this one guy who would just put me to sleep because he had one of those really deep bass monotone voices... cures anyone's insomnia
But with tutors there might just be some "shopping" possible ... seriously, if you do any accounting units, a tutor that speaks English is a big bonus - suddenly the numbers start to make some sense ... "so I wasn't completely intellectually incompetent after all..."
Then there are those tutors who clearly haven't prepared and just pretty much rock up to class and then go... "Okay, lets start the discussion..." and then after and hour or two of hearing the most vocal students rant on about how wonderful they are and how much extensive reading/experience they have in the area,... you are left with the realisation that you have just lost another chunk of your life that will never come back...
There's also a spectrum that most tutors can be plotted on - at one extreme are the lecturers/uber smart doctors who have studied and researched the area for their entire career and at the other extreme newly graduated students who in the first tutorial confesses "You know what? I don't really know much about this unit and I'm actually really learning with you...yea... so..."
Whilst balance is fantastic, it is amusing to see the extremes; uber smart tutor is bored with our mediocre undergraduate minds that clearly are inferior and they would tend to assume you have done every scrap of reading possible on that subject and expect you to engage in head-throbbing intellectual debate... the other end of the scale can be good when they tend to be able to identify what areas you need to know and what you can skimp on.. but then the drawback is most questions you ask will be answered with... + "I'm not sure, I think it's best to ask the lecturer on that..."
The most awesome tutors are... drumroll... those that can a) communicate b) my god give us notes (our saviours...) c) present the material in a logical manner d) respond to emails... some are awesome, once had a tutor that was instantly replying my emails even an hour before the deadline ...
Unfortunately, if you land a bad lecturer, there isn't much you can do but grind your teeth and reach for the voodoo doll ... anyone else ever had one that was so monotone and robotic that it seriously made you wonder where is the "off button"? I had this one guy who would just put me to sleep because he had one of those really deep bass monotone voices... cures anyone's insomnia
But with tutors there might just be some "shopping" possible ... seriously, if you do any accounting units, a tutor that speaks English is a big bonus - suddenly the numbers start to make some sense ... "so I wasn't completely intellectually incompetent after all..."
Then there are those tutors who clearly haven't prepared and just pretty much rock up to class and then go... "Okay, lets start the discussion..." and then after and hour or two of hearing the most vocal students rant on about how wonderful they are and how much extensive reading/experience they have in the area,... you are left with the realisation that you have just lost another chunk of your life that will never come back...
There's also a spectrum that most tutors can be plotted on - at one extreme are the lecturers/uber smart doctors who have studied and researched the area for their entire career and at the other extreme newly graduated students who in the first tutorial confesses "You know what? I don't really know much about this unit and I'm actually really learning with you...yea... so..."
Whilst balance is fantastic, it is amusing to see the extremes; uber smart tutor is bored with our mediocre undergraduate minds that clearly are inferior and they would tend to assume you have done every scrap of reading possible on that subject and expect you to engage in head-throbbing intellectual debate... the other end of the scale can be good when they tend to be able to identify what areas you need to know and what you can skimp on.. but then the drawback is most questions you ask will be answered with... + "I'm not sure, I think it's best to ask the lecturer on that..."
The most awesome tutors are... drumroll... those that can a) communicate b) my god give us notes (our saviours...) c) present the material in a logical manner d) respond to emails... some are awesome, once had a tutor that was instantly replying my emails even an hour before the deadline ...