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by Groxx 5744 days ago
I think that part of the problem is that each professor believes their classes to be the most important, and students have wildly varying workloads.

Personally, my favorite setup is what one of my math professors does: recommended homework, which can be submitted to get feedback, and which 1/2 of the test questions are pulled from. If you do it all, it's a lot, but you're not required to do any. Predictably, most people do little, but the people who need it / actually care still get the benefit of homework, and the flexibility of a lack of deadlines.

2 comments

I had a calc teacher in high school who did the "recommended homework" thing.

It was amazing, as I could devote however much time I needed in order to be able to identify and then efficiently and effectively solve a given problem type.

This was still at the level where it was a lot closer to arithmetic than actual math (even the most complicated problems rested on just one or two methods which we already knew, and all had an objective, known solution), but the flexibility that it offered me was very useful, given the busy-ness of my schedule that year.

I like the sound of that policy -- for some courses, it would work fine. For other, there might be problem:

* Some courses are hard enough, and many undergraduates are undisciplined enough, that a lot of students would end up failing. Of course, when this happens, the professor gets a whole bunch of reviews back telling him that he taught badly.

* Sometimes exams aren't the best setting for evaluation.

1) I dislike the current organization for college+ level schools. That's an entirely different issue. And, given that this approach is a bit... liberal in its views of students, it's less likely to be taken by anyone without tenure. In which case they're nearly immune to feedback like that if they can demonstrate their system. At least, in my experience.

2) Yeah, but then you're in an entirely different style of class, and it probably doesn't have a lot of busy-work homework like objectively-testable (if there is such a thing) classes can generate. Though please, point some out to me if you've had any, I'm quite interested in how education is handled :)