i am skipping my classes today, not because i'm sick or stuck at home for reasons beyond my control, oh no. but because my professors' lectures are so incredibly shallow and arbitrary i'm learning more by just sitting here and taking my own notes from the readings rather than forcing myself to sit through yet another ridiculously long lecture.
That's too bad. This semester, I was lucky and I have awsome profs. All of them are really good teachers who actually make their respective subjects interesting.
go psyche! I did the same damn thing, but ended up not reading or studying at all...so I didn't do well...unless it was a subject I liked....like history... You should rest up for the weekend, girlie
I skipped my classes today as well. Only coz I didn't feel like getting out of bed just so I could listen to some economics bs that I don't understand no matter how hard I try. I'm not trying very hard though.. :&
I'm skipping school tomorrow for a "mental health day". God knows I'm getting to need it to get ready for Thanksgiving.
In my ecology class this semester, my prof just reads off the notes that he posts on his website. LAME. That would by why I haven't gone in about three weeks. LOL
sounds like my finance prof. she contradicts the powerpoint presentation with her lecture at least once per lecture... the textbook is shitty but it's better than her lectures sadly enough
haha...today was senior skip day...except that no one really skipped, because they picked the day right before fricken break, so no one really cares about skipping, and everyone had a bunch of tests that they didn't feel like making up.
well i'm a freshman, but cool i was synchronized with something that gives me a tiny blip of validation. damn you therefore, you're lucky.. i'm praying that my next semester's lineup will be better. though i was looking on ratemyprofessor.ca and some of them got really shitty reviews, so we'll see... it's ironic that a lot of our teachers are doing a half-assed job. i'm just reading about how education is becoming more of a commodity, and it's getting to the point where consumers (students) are able to take legal action against teachers for not providing satisfactory amounts of information as should be present within the bounds of the implied contract of tertiary education. oh it gives me ideas... eh who am i kidding, i'm too lazy to give a shit...