sandgk
Watson, Crick & A Twist
Perhaps you are not up to hearing more critiscism, perhaps you are not willing to take and weigh the advice and perspective others offer. Regardless, let me offer you this insight.osustamm said:I am sorry if i offended anyone on here. I was stating my honest opinion about Ohio State the school... I know from my experience my last few years that OSU dosn't care much about undergrad students compaired to how much "research" they do... I wasn't told this when i came to visit. I am pretty pissed off about all of the talk about raising standards of students. I think before that is done we need to raise the standards for profs. I don't care what type of research is being done if i can't understand my DifEQ professor or TA. The smartest guy in the world in some area can be the worst teacher of it.
You do not go to college or University to learn from a Professor. I know this may come as a shocking realization, it is however quite true. The golden prize in your College career is to learn how to learn - reach that goal and everything else comes easily.
A Professor can facilitate the growth of your knowledge, point you in the direction of analogies that underscore your subject matter or perhaps assist in improving your level of understanding of a core concept. All this is most often done against a back-drop of an iteration in the form of lectures of the key points found in one or more text-books -- most likely reflecting the material you are expected to read, learn and inwardly digest.
Too often students expect college to be like high school (where the onus is more on the teacher to make sure your grades are up to snuff, and that you are ready to pass the exams). All too rarely is the true nature of going to College explained to incoming students, it is truly a sink or swim environment, you are expected to do the work, you are expected to do the learning. The first step toward which is learning TO learn. That is an talent most High School students have inadequately honed prior to entering College. And yes, the College environment (anywhere) is replete with Professors who know their subject back to front but have the skills of a donkey braying in Esperanto when it comes to communicating ideas. Such "lack of communication" by say your Differential Equation teacher does not mean you have been failed. All the answers you need are in the text books. The only key needed to unlock those answers is learning the tricking of how to learn - period. Once that trick is learned it is an easier matter to understand the books, and oh yes, those hard to translate teachers.
But make no mistake, it is your responsibility in a College envionment to learn how to learn -- not that of the Differential Equation X01 Professor. Sure - he is focussed on research as well as fulfilling his teaching responsibilities. Likewise, you should be focussed on one thing only, learning to learn. The rest follows.
The greatest shame of this -- by the language of your posts -- is that this simple concept was not clearly explained to you while you were a Freshman.
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