(no subject)
Mar. 26th, 2003 08:39 pmI dislike lecturers who don't disseminate information such as preferred style of written assessment (eg, essay, report, bullet points) when said assessment is part of a pass/fail subject. Yes, John Whitty, I'm talking about *you*. And Mr Tutor Dave who hasn't said a word yet about the scope statement (assessments starting today). Mr Other Tutor, Who Runs The Wednesday Ones And Whose Name I Can't Remember, I don't mind you. In fact, you were quite informative - dare I say, verbose. In a good way.
I also dislike lecturers who are lazy about filing paperwork when said paperwork is necessary to prevent unfair exclusion. Margot Brereton, I'm talking about you.
Guess what?
My day sucked.
However, I do like thesis supervisors who give their students a hand with things such as report structure, thesis structure, etc when honest (and very confused) questions are asked, due to the abundant lack of information about such things at the University of Queensland. Philip Machanick, this is where you fit in.
If any of the above-named find this entry, you're also welcome to read the rest of my angst that I publicise here. It won't be very complimentary (not all the time anyway) since I am the easily-annoyed type. That being said, I do not react with actual anger unless under extreme provocation - such as some of todays' events.
It may also be fairly depressing.
And you should probably be doing something else, like filling out forms, managing a subject, or writing papers. But you're welcome as anyone else is to read this. What you do in your spare time is your own business (although why you might be reading about *my* angst in particular, I'm not quite sure...).
I also dislike lecturers who are lazy about filing paperwork when said paperwork is necessary to prevent unfair exclusion. Margot Brereton, I'm talking about you.
Guess what?
My day sucked.
However, I do like thesis supervisors who give their students a hand with things such as report structure, thesis structure, etc when honest (and very confused) questions are asked, due to the abundant lack of information about such things at the University of Queensland. Philip Machanick, this is where you fit in.
If any of the above-named find this entry, you're also welcome to read the rest of my angst that I publicise here. It won't be very complimentary (not all the time anyway) since I am the easily-annoyed type. That being said, I do not react with actual anger unless under extreme provocation - such as some of todays' events.
It may also be fairly depressing.
And you should probably be doing something else, like filling out forms, managing a subject, or writing papers. But you're welcome as anyone else is to read this. What you do in your spare time is your own business (although why you might be reading about *my* angst in particular, I'm not quite sure...).