Grading grading grading grading grading
Grading grading grading grading grading
Grading grading grading grading grading
Grading grading grading grading grading
do u know how long you grade
you grade forever
you grade forever and a day
every stack of grading that goes away means a new one is coming
I use a whole pen up for every stack
A million forests must be chopped down to make all these papers
i am only 1/5 done with the grading I have to finish by 3 today
how do u even grade
what even is this job
verbs nouns dangling modifiers
shitty stupid ideas they thought of one hour before the deadline
but you have to couch your criticism in a loving way
like a goddamn mother
Comments
i am having a psychic break
i can't believe there are still 3 more papers to go before christmas vacation
i can't read another one of these papers
i am an idiot for assigning any papers ever
somebody help
help
How many of us grow up to be professional writers? Pretty much none, right? SO WHY IS THAT HOW WE ARE EDUCATED AND EVALUATED?
Granted, I have absolutely no alternative to propose. To do so would require writing, which, ick.
Learning to write a clear, compelling, effective paper is a major way you learn to THINK clearly and critically. There's a reason the educational spectrum is just about writing longer and longer and more and more complex papers the higher up you get--it is how you learn to construct sophisticated thoughts and arguments. It's not arbitrary at all. I believe in papers and in grading them, I just wanted to complain, because grading them can be a real slog. It can also be amazing, to see a kid attain a stunning revelation via a clear structure that leads inevitably to a well-bolstered conclusion.
Learning how to think is so important; learning how to write can be a huge factor in this
I don't come down to where you work and slap the dick out of your mouth
I was probably particularly naive, but still. I think the there's something to the idea that we should think critically about what we're teaching kids by basing their "value" (grades) almost exclusively on writing. Agreed, MZ!
A real wild card
Also "our education" is not dominated by paper writing. The vast majority of today's education is performed via multiple choice tests that specifically value the ability to assess "right" and "wrong" statements, which is a very different skill set than paper-writing, which asks students to be creative and imaginative in addition to being critical and logical. Even in college, where paper writing comes into play again, one must also take tons of science and math classes, in which no paper writing occurs. Not sure where this belief that all students do is write pointless papers comes from, as it has not been my experience as a student or as a teacher.
Also I've never had to do math in my career so does that mean I should not have had to take math classes? Should we sit each kindergartner down and be like "Hmmm, you're obviously never going to write articles for the New York Times, so NO WRITING FOR YOU!"
If you personally have never had to write a paper for whatever career you randomly ended up in, I'm not sure how we can apply that information to revamping the educational system for all students, since no one can know what career they'll end up in and thus how can we know WHICH skills we teach our students are actually going to end up being declared stupid and pointless by them 30 years later???
I am getting in fights on the internet today because I am worked up and full of rage because I have misused my time today and hate myself for it
Also, I always hated math and never really progressed past algebra 'cause I thought I'd never use it and I was pretty bad at it, and now I have to use it a bunch in JavaScript and damn, if I was better at it I could do some pretty amazing stuff with programming.
I believe math is real and important and valuable and that knowing how to do it is evidence of having grasped a sophisticated set of concepts and skills, even though I personally can not do any math and got one of the lowest scores in my entire high school on the math portion of the SAT. Someone telling me that learning how to do math is good for my brain, and that the skill sets math classes work on are meaningful, is not something I take personally. It is okay to be good at stuff and not other stuff; what concerns me is the flippant denigration of the skill set itself, like because you don't have to write papers now it is a senseless task that didn't do you any good to work on back then. I strongly reject that notion and think it's both dangerous and depressing.
fighting on the internet is also dumb
maybe I am the dumb one
100% yes.
I completely understand the link between writing and the ability to construct thoughts and arguments, and I anticipated your rebuttal. However, I just see a lot of paradoxes (paradoxii?) in the process. For example, I might have a really interesting thought on or firm grasp of the material at hand, but I fuck up on a bunch of stupid grammar rules and therefore I'm penalized.
Like I said, I have no idea what a possible alternative could be (possibly because it cannot exist). It's just another one of those "thangs that bugs me," because I don't believe that a person's ability to write an A+ paper is directly related to their value on this Earth, and I have seen many people get bummed out due to their struggles in school that are directly related to being repeatedly evaluated on a weakness they have ("bad" writing).
I think maybe what I'm feeling is that it should be more of a compassionate guidance towards your particular aptitude? Like, it's OK that we have everyone take Math and write papers on Chaucer, but if someone is not good at that particular thing, could it be less like "FAILURE" and more like "Ok, this isn't your thing"? (No, it could not. This is classic impossible idealism by me.)
How could we ever possibly design an educational system that could anticipate this? Even if we could design it, radical change seems impossible. WE'RE DOOMED!
Look, I just hate writing papers.
I def have students who just don't like writing and aren't great at it, and they are still humans with lots to offer and other skills that I know nothing about and totally admire. Everyone is different. I just don't feel like "paper writing" is given as much emphasis in education as you guys were making it seem like!! My kids write five papers in 4 months, that doesn't seem that heavy does it? My other class only does 3. They're given many other opportunities to work on and demonstrate their other skills (talking in class and tests, and then over in their math/science classes they're doing shit like coding or whatever. equations. who knows what goes on over there. labs)
everyone is smart and awesome and this world is beautiful because we are all good at different shit and shitty at different shit!!!!!!!!!!
Let us all raise a glass and be glad we no longer have to do the things we were bad at doing in school!!!!!!!! LARGE WINES
Let's be clear, I pretty much *always* got an A on my papers, and even with that fact, I cannot stand having a paper deadline looming over my head. Even though it's "only" five papers in four months, you have other papers due for other classes, and it's just like there's always a paper due. I can't explain the relief that came over me when I graduated and finally had no more papers to write.
I still write things for work, but I know that they will not be scrutinized and are generally only a couple hundred words at most. That's a level of pressure I can deal with.
Re: writing emphasis of education - first of all, I took way fewer science/math classes in undergrad than many, and my perspective is based on my experience. It's not that the quantity or papers is not doable, it's just that most grades are based on papers. I'm also not saying that I have an alternative in mind, and I do certainly agree that being able to write/think is SUPER IMPORTANT.
Actually, you know what? Forget it. I'm really glad I did all that writing, and I think I just like to blame my dissatisfaction with my own personal career trajectory on my educators because I'm lazy. I had awesome educators and an awesome education.
"what concerns me is the flippant denigration of the skill set itself, like because you don't have to write papers now it is a senseless task that didn't do you any good to work on back then." --> did not mean to denigrate the skill. Just wish my education had also emphasized the value of other skills in a more balanced way. I've had too much coffee this morning and honestly cannot think/write, sorry. Also, something that is not the fault of my educators but is my own fault: very much wish I had participated in internships while in college. That would have really helped round-out my experience.
That art class professor sounds like a turd. I can not imagine making a kid write a paper specifically about how great my class was!!!!!!! I wonder where he is now?
so while i am the guy who teaches things that "directly correlate in a literal fashion to what [they] will do for money" i tell my students "you ain't gonna get no freakin' job if you write or talk like a neanderthal..."
KARL
That ain't no dishwand, dude!!
And you also do not have to cite where that came from (own brain).
to sum up: I work hard with my freshmen to get them to realize that "academic" (whatever that means--when used as a pejorative I think it just means boring?) writing not only can but SHOULD be literary and engaging. I do workshops with them on "voice" and how to infuse personality into their arguments. It's fun to see some of them click with it and start experimenting! And some never do, and that is fine also, we are all different.
It sounds like you weren't given the opportunity to realize that infusing verve and character and jokes into your papers makes them better, which sucks and I am sorry!
But yeah, the rigid 5-paragraph essay format everyone is forced to learn in high school is to actual academic writing what freshman algebra is to, like, Newtonian physics. Good nuts and bolts tools but not the final product.
at least not yet
My point is is that those boring academic papers one writes really help down the road when you actually have to write/communicate something that is actually important (note that 'boring' and 'actually important' are used here in a (mostly) sarcastic sense). "Sure, you might never write an essay again for the rest of your life," I say to my students, "but if you ever want to get a job, a grant, funding for your film, hired to direct a music video, etc, than you'd better know how to write a good cover letter, grant application, synopsis, treatment proposal, etc. People will judge you HARSHLY on your ability to communicate, and in a super competitive field like (fill in the blank), would-be employers/funders/etc are looking for any excuse to throw your application in the trash."
When i talk in these terms, I can see the fear in the eyes of those students who suddenly realize they should have taken their English/writing classes more seriously.
something it seems like we are forgetting more and more in all our entrepreneurial talk of pleasing the client (a.k.a. the student) and maximizing profits
learning how to do hard shit is good for you
BOTTOM LINE
WTF