Skip to main content

Add/drop makes me grumpy

Last week, ProfHacker asked 'how do you handle add/drop?' and I meant to leave a comment but then got busy. When I went back to look at how others responded, I had to laugh at Courtney's comment, which starts out, "Add/drop makes me extremely grumpy." I agree completely. In my 500-seater, I've been giving out add codes to anyone who asks because the class was severely under-enrolled (I started the semester with only 297 registered) and my department as a whole is under-target for our FTEs. I warn students that they can't make up any assignments they've missed (though I drop a few clicker scores at the end of the semester so as long as they don't miss anymore, it won't really matter) but although I think what I cover in the first few weeks is the most important stuff we do all semester (since it's really hammering home the core principles), the reality is that if students miss these first few weeks, it's probably not that big a deal.

However, add/drop has been a major pain for my upper-division writing class. Students work on several assignments collaboratively over the semester and for various reasons, I assign them to their teams. I spent a lot of time over the weekend figuring out what the teams would be for each assignment for the rest of the semester (I get kind of obsessive about matching students up and not having them work with the same partner more than once), only to find out Monday morning that one of the students had dropped the class over the weekend. Not only does this mess up some of the assignments I had already made, it also means that the class now has an odd number of students (and all my team assignments were either pairs or groups of four). Even if I contacted the next person on the crash list, it's really too late to let someone add the class, so now I have to figure out how to make threesomes for some of the assignments. I probably should have thought to check my roster before spending all that time on the group assignments but I don't actually even know when the student dropped (other than it was sometime between Friday afternoon and Monday morning) so other than waiting until after the drop deadline entirely, the problem could still have come up. Definitely makes me grumpy..

Comments

  1. Extended add periods drive me crazy, because of the message they send to students: "The first x meetings of any class are unimportant." I understand the need for some time for people to add a class late, but when people start wanting in after the first week (or two! or three!), I get testy. They've missed classes, they're two to three chapters behind on the reading, they've missed assignments. And they almost always do poorly in the class.

    I just hate it.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Maybe for you or any of your students: I have just added a Reference List to my economics blog with economic data series, history, bibliographies etc. for students & researchers. Currently over 200 meta sources, it will in the next days grow to over a thousand. Check it out and if you miss something, feel free to leave a comment.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Comments that contribute to the discussion are always welcome! Please note that spammy comments whose only purpose seems to be to direct traffic to a commercial site will be deleted.

Popular posts from this blog

What are the costs?

I came across an interesting discussion about a 19-year-old intern who was fired from The Gazette in Colorado Springs for plagiarism. There appears to be some controversy over the fact that the editor publicly named the girl in a letter to readers (explaining and apologizing for the plagiarism), with some people saying that doing so was unduly harsh because this incident will now follow her for the rest of her career. I was intrigued by this discussion for two reasons - one, it seems pretty clear to me that this was not a case of ignorance (as I have often encountered with my own students who have no idea how to paraphrase or cite correctly) and two, putting aside the offense itself, I have often struggled with how to handle situations where there are long-term repercussions for a student, repercussions that lead the overall costs to be far higher than might seem warranted for the specific situation. As an example of the latter issue, I have occasionally taught seniors who need to p

What was your high school economics experience like?

As I mentioned in my last post , I am asking my Econ for Teachers students to reflect on their reading by responding to discussion prompts. It occurred to me that it wouldn't be a bad idea for me to share my thoughts on those issues here and see if anyone wants to chime in. For this week, the students were asked to read the California and national content standards , an article by Mark Schug and others about why social science teachers dread teaching economics and how to overcome the dread, an article by William Walstad on the importance of economics for understanding the world around us and making better personal decisions (with some evidence on the dismal state of economic literacy in this country), and another article by Walstad on the status of economic education in high schools (full citations below). The reflection prompt asks the students to then answer the following questions: What was your high school econ experience like? What do you remember most from that class? How do

When is an exam "too hard"?

By now, you may have heard about the biology professor at Louisiana State (Baton Rouge) who was removed from teaching an intro course where "more than 90 percent of the students... were failing or had dropped the class." The majority of the comments on the Inside Higher Ed story about it are supportive of the professor, particularly given that it seems like the administration did not even talk to her about the situation before acting. I tend to fall in the "there's got to be more to the story so I'll reserve judgment" camp but the story definitely struck a nerve with me, partly because I recently spent 30 minutes "debating" with a student about whether the last midterm was "too hard" and the whole conversation was super-frustrating. To give some background: I give three midterms and a cumulative final, plus have clicker points and Aplia assignments that make up about 20% of the final grade. I do not curve individual exams but will cu