What is the name of your state? MA
I was in for a surprise today as I sat down for my exam in my anatomy and physiology course at a community college. The teacher asked to see me in private, told me I had missed too many classes and asked me to leave as he apparently put in the paperwork for an instructor withdrawal the week prior. Today is one week prior to the end of the semester.
I'm a little confused. A few years back I missed one too many days in a class that had a mandatory attendance policy. I was depressed and felt horrible. I went through my routine for the week in my little cave before I withdrew from the class myself. Then I decided to check my voice mail and there was my professor trying to work something out because my grades were good.
This last semester I had a discussion with some of the nursing professors regarding punctuality because I had a hard time adapting to a new daily schedule. This was brought on by three instances of being 15-25 minutes late. In this instance I understand the magnitude of the problem because the program requires so many hours of clinical time. If students somehow progressed without the required amount the program would be in jeopardy when it was audited at some point. In this discussion one of the professors had requested as part of the solution that my attendance be required at all lectures. Another professor said this could not be required of me but for clinical it could..... even though it is stated in the syllabus that a student can only miss one lecture.
I never really wanted to "test the waters" in my A&P class but it seemed to me this was more of a guideline than a black and white rule. So I missed one class in A&P early on that was planned so I could study for a nursing exam. Nothing was said. I later missed one because I didn't check the schedule and took the wrong Sunday off for spring break. Nothing was said.... I'm now one day over the limit. Last week I over slept by 2 3/4 hours and figured whats the point of going in for the last 30-45 minutes. Granted none of these are worthy reasons to miss a class. That's two days over the limit and the first thing that was said to me was as I sat down for my exam this morning.
But the reason I'm confused is that I had a potential 'A' for the end of the semester and definitely an 'A-'. My academic performance was not affected. Luckily there is the policy one lecture exam will be dropped so it is still possible for me to receive an 'A' and I'm confident I will be at least an 'A-'. Not only was my performance not affected, I most likely have the highest grade in the class.
In addition he felt as though I "nickeled and dimed" the class. I'm not sure if that is a reference to the fact I'm not very well off financially at all and could not purchase all the books I needed for the semester. Or because I value any potential point that could be awarded to me or the class. No matter how hard you study you never know what your next grade will be. One point could be the difference between a 0.3/0.4 GPA increment. So in the hopes a getting more points I would bring up ambiguities in some questions.
I don't see how his action served anyone. I never asked for extra time outside of regular class hours, there are no assignments due in class to makeup. I paid for his class time like everyone else, as well as to be evaluated just like everyone else. I would've gotten one of the higher grades if all the sections he taught were combined into one class for this semester.
Not only does this matter itself concern me, but what supersedes it is how this affects my status in the nursing program. This class is suppose to be a pre-/co-requisite to my current nursing class. Having an instructor withdrawal in A&P automatically will create the same in my nursing class. This essentially hits the "reset" button on my nursing education at this college and I'll have to restart that program from scratch... and I would've had an A!!!
I'm going to speak with some people in the college tomorrow but I don't understand the reasoning behind the action. I thought teachers were there to help you learn.... if one is already getting an 'A' how much more can you learn in a course that is essentially memorization?
Can I sue for the cost of education in this timeframe? I obviously was going to pass, is this not some form of damage to me? Once I entered the "grey zone" shouldn't some limit have been set that I should have been told?
I read through a few posts (more pertaining to high school). Please do not compare this to job truancy. That is a different matter. I have "employed" the college for its services. At a job they have employed me for mine.
I was in for a surprise today as I sat down for my exam in my anatomy and physiology course at a community college. The teacher asked to see me in private, told me I had missed too many classes and asked me to leave as he apparently put in the paperwork for an instructor withdrawal the week prior. Today is one week prior to the end of the semester.
I'm a little confused. A few years back I missed one too many days in a class that had a mandatory attendance policy. I was depressed and felt horrible. I went through my routine for the week in my little cave before I withdrew from the class myself. Then I decided to check my voice mail and there was my professor trying to work something out because my grades were good.
This last semester I had a discussion with some of the nursing professors regarding punctuality because I had a hard time adapting to a new daily schedule. This was brought on by three instances of being 15-25 minutes late. In this instance I understand the magnitude of the problem because the program requires so many hours of clinical time. If students somehow progressed without the required amount the program would be in jeopardy when it was audited at some point. In this discussion one of the professors had requested as part of the solution that my attendance be required at all lectures. Another professor said this could not be required of me but for clinical it could..... even though it is stated in the syllabus that a student can only miss one lecture.
I never really wanted to "test the waters" in my A&P class but it seemed to me this was more of a guideline than a black and white rule. So I missed one class in A&P early on that was planned so I could study for a nursing exam. Nothing was said. I later missed one because I didn't check the schedule and took the wrong Sunday off for spring break. Nothing was said.... I'm now one day over the limit. Last week I over slept by 2 3/4 hours and figured whats the point of going in for the last 30-45 minutes. Granted none of these are worthy reasons to miss a class. That's two days over the limit and the first thing that was said to me was as I sat down for my exam this morning.
But the reason I'm confused is that I had a potential 'A' for the end of the semester and definitely an 'A-'. My academic performance was not affected. Luckily there is the policy one lecture exam will be dropped so it is still possible for me to receive an 'A' and I'm confident I will be at least an 'A-'. Not only was my performance not affected, I most likely have the highest grade in the class.
In addition he felt as though I "nickeled and dimed" the class. I'm not sure if that is a reference to the fact I'm not very well off financially at all and could not purchase all the books I needed for the semester. Or because I value any potential point that could be awarded to me or the class. No matter how hard you study you never know what your next grade will be. One point could be the difference between a 0.3/0.4 GPA increment. So in the hopes a getting more points I would bring up ambiguities in some questions.
I don't see how his action served anyone. I never asked for extra time outside of regular class hours, there are no assignments due in class to makeup. I paid for his class time like everyone else, as well as to be evaluated just like everyone else. I would've gotten one of the higher grades if all the sections he taught were combined into one class for this semester.
Not only does this matter itself concern me, but what supersedes it is how this affects my status in the nursing program. This class is suppose to be a pre-/co-requisite to my current nursing class. Having an instructor withdrawal in A&P automatically will create the same in my nursing class. This essentially hits the "reset" button on my nursing education at this college and I'll have to restart that program from scratch... and I would've had an A!!!
I'm going to speak with some people in the college tomorrow but I don't understand the reasoning behind the action. I thought teachers were there to help you learn.... if one is already getting an 'A' how much more can you learn in a course that is essentially memorization?
Can I sue for the cost of education in this timeframe? I obviously was going to pass, is this not some form of damage to me? Once I entered the "grey zone" shouldn't some limit have been set that I should have been told?
I read through a few posts (more pertaining to high school). Please do not compare this to job truancy. That is a different matter. I have "employed" the college for its services. At a job they have employed me for mine.
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