Necronic
Staff member
A philosphical question. Are you paying for the teacher (a master in their field) to educate you, or are you paying for a teacher (a master in their field) to asses your level of expertise in that field?
I have had this debate ongoing for a long time with various people, but I never posed the question like this, which I think is its proper format. My belief is that you are paying for the latter. What that means is that attending the courses a teacher provides should be optional, if very highly suggested. If you are capable of learning the material on your own (which very few people truly are).
I've gotten into a lot of arguments with college professors over this in my time, specifically as it applies to attendance grades. I used to consider them lazy teaching, as all you are testing is a person's ability to make it into class, not their mastery of material, but a long argument with a sociology professor I met changed my mind a bit. Granted he wasn't able to really see my point, but I was able to understand that in broad topics like the liberal arts testing someone on an arbitrary scale is very difficult, therefore paying attention to classroom participation can be a way to determine some level of expertise.
I dunno, thoughts?
I have had this debate ongoing for a long time with various people, but I never posed the question like this, which I think is its proper format. My belief is that you are paying for the latter. What that means is that attending the courses a teacher provides should be optional, if very highly suggested. If you are capable of learning the material on your own (which very few people truly are).
I've gotten into a lot of arguments with college professors over this in my time, specifically as it applies to attendance grades. I used to consider them lazy teaching, as all you are testing is a person's ability to make it into class, not their mastery of material, but a long argument with a sociology professor I met changed my mind a bit. Granted he wasn't able to really see my point, but I was able to understand that in broad topics like the liberal arts testing someone on an arbitrary scale is very difficult, therefore paying attention to classroom participation can be a way to determine some level of expertise.
I dunno, thoughts?