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by shortrounddev2
875 days ago
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I've always disliked the perverse incentive of universities to hire professors who are good researchers but perhaps abysmal instructors. They may be subject matter experts but that doesn't necessarily qualify them to teach. They know as much, and often pawn off their undergrad classes on their grad students. I had a CS theory professor who was always out at math conferences and it made me wondering what the point of paying thousands in tuition to that school was if I'm just getting an underpaid grad student to teach me everything. I've heard some professors are recruited with the explicit promise that they'll do a minimal amount of actual teaching. Ironically this can mean that the supposedly "best" universities in the country have some of the worst in-class experience for undergrads, where huge lecture halls with 200 students are taught the fundamentals by people only a couple years older than them and not the world-renowned experts that they paid to see. If this isn't good enough for them, it's on the student to make up the difference via after-class labs with the grad students who help them solve their homework problems It feels like in some universities, research is the point and the undergrad programs simply exist to subsidize the graduate and PhD work and not to develop a new generation of people for the good of society |
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The point of undergraduates is to learn enough on their own that merely talking with them does not make the professor want to poke his own eyes out.
There are two kinds of intern - those who want me to teach them and those that learn by them selves and Injust point out what’s wrong
Yes I should do much much more to reach out but …