August 16, 2010
Facebook and Mustard: The Answer Revealed
Today I got a call from a student on my cell phone, given to him by the registrar, I assume. First of all, he called me by my first name. He doesn't know me. He doesn't know what I normally go by in the classroom. Sure, there are plenty of people who use their first names in the classroom. However, I don't. Maybe it's the few years of teaching high school, but my students call me "Mrs. B." He should have assumed the more formal alternative. Right away, he went to the first name. Dude, we are not on a first name basis.
He then proceeded to tell me that he will miss the first week of class because he is going on vacation. He wanted to know, and I quote, if "I'll miss anything." Um, yeah, buddy, you're going to miss the first week of class. The first week of class is crucial. It's where I lay down the law, drive all that info on the syllabus into your head and then we get down to business and start working on first speeches. Yes, the first week. That's how I roll.
This reminds me of the student I had last year. In the middle of discussing my strict attendance policy, she shot her hand up in the air and said, "Um, yeah, I'm from far away. And if someone in my family gets sick or dies or something, I might not be here for like a whole week."
I'm not a fan of people who interrupt me to tell me their personal business, business that can be taken care of AFTER class, not during when it's wasting everyone's time including my own. I asked her if she had any sick and/or dying family members or friends. She said, "no." And then I told her that we should just go on and assume that everyone is going to stay healthy for now and that we'll deal with it, if and when that time comes.
I am fully aware that college students experience the death of a grandparent at least once per semester, every semester throughout their time at the university. But let's just deal with that when it happens. I can also now add that on the morning of my Grammon's funeral, I came and taught my class before going to the funeral.
Needless to say, I am a bit concerned about my students this semester. Each year I am a bit older and less tolerable. I always have some awesome kids; but the non-awesome ones can really overshadow those bright and shiny ones sometimes.
But, I've left you hanging enough. Here is how Facebook is like mustard. . .
"Yet it is paramount to understand that everything has its own pros and cons. Take mustard, for instance. It has barely any calories but that doesn't mean every dieter will find it delectable. While mustard is almost completely different from Facebook, my point remains solid. Facebook isn't for everyone."
I can't even begin to tell you how badly I want this student in my class. It is out of the box thinking like this that makes me think that there is hope. Bright, shiny, mustard-colored Facebooky hope.
How close were you to the right answer? I have to say, those ketchup responses were pretty funny.
Yeah, I kinda love the mustard kid. At least it’s memorable. At least he didn’t argue that women shouldn’t be in the military because they don’t like to get dirty. I told you about that student of mine last semester, didn’t I? Sigh.
You did! What a tool!
Hmm, I thought about this while I was at Star Wars Celebration and came up with: Facebook is like mustard — used sometimes for the right foods of thought. (And then you swap in other condiments of Twitter, blogs, flickr, etc. for the other foods.)
I love mustard, but it’s not for every food.
One of my 11th graders attended class, went home, and gave birth. I remind my class that if anyone is in a more dire situation, they may miss class… (True, too…)
I had a student last semester fail the course (I’ve been an adjunct for 15 years and this was the first student who ever failed although a few came close, LOL). Anyway – two weeks after grades were posted, his MOTHER emailed me to ask if I could please change the grade I “gave” him because it might keep him from graduating in December and starting a job overseas soon after. BTW, the reason he was unable to turn his first, third and fourth assignments in was because his grandmother was ill. He, too, called me by my first name in every follow up email he sent.
Feeling your “pain,” BBM
I had a student stop attending in the beginning of October. Then, right around Thanksgiving, his mother emailed me to ask if he could make up all the work he missed. He had not turned anything in since the 2nd week in September. Um, no. I was shocked, but apparently mothers do get involved in their college kids business more often than one would think.
What type of idiot student takes a vacation for the first week of school?
Ducking head here – it wasn’t exactly a vacation, but I missed the first two weeks of my junior year of college because of a dispute with my mother over the plane tickets. I called all of my professors but one (couldn’t get hold of her, I did try) and apologized profusely, had them send me any work ahead of time, etc., but it really did get the semester off to a lousy start. It took me almost two months to convince the professor that I couldn’t reach that I hadn’t been blowing off her class. (The 100% on the midterm did a lot to warm her up to me.) And I can’t imagine calling any of my professors by their first names. Ever.
The mustard analogy is great. You can teach how to refine a good imagination; it’s much harder to show someone how to be imaginative.
Jeezes, I would never call my professors by their first name (that is extremely rude) and to call someone in their free time to tell them you’re basically going to skipp class for a purely selfish reason and then have the nerve to assume the first week or any class is going to be useless and a waste of time is just… incredible.
The second example is slightly less rude but quite annoying as well: I absolutely detest people who waste everyone’s time by either asking questions about things they should already know or go rambling on about their own theories or thoughts that are usually quite superficial if not downright wrong. Save it for the exam genius and you’d better pay some attention or you’re not even going to make it at uni.
Pretty interesting comment about the mustard.
Regards,
Zara
The type that flunks out.