Do any other students here find that they do best in classes that don't bore them, but that don't terribly interest them either?
In classes that bore me completely, I wind up not paying attention or just failing to absorb the information due to its sheer (apparent) uselessness.
In classes I love, it's even worse, because I'm capable of taking pride in the quality of my work to some extent, so I have a very difficult time following instructions that don't approach a problem the same way I would. The way schools expect students to respond to any given situation just don't seem to work for me, or at least they don't work as efficiently as how I like to do them. The result is very different work that usually gets graded down for not following criteria precisely. Most of the time it's just because I find the criteria counterproductive, "required" or not. And it always happens in classes I love. In high school, English; in college, public speaking, history, creative writing...
It doesn't help that sometimes the professors have something factually incorrect, I can't correct them without undermining their authority over the class, and I'm thus stuck keeping track of a set of inaccurate information to include in my essays!
I don't know what the point of this thread is except to vent angst. And can I get an "Amen," brothers?
A merry Argh! to you all.
In classes that bore me completely, I wind up not paying attention or just failing to absorb the information due to its sheer (apparent) uselessness.
In classes I love, it's even worse, because I'm capable of taking pride in the quality of my work to some extent, so I have a very difficult time following instructions that don't approach a problem the same way I would. The way schools expect students to respond to any given situation just don't seem to work for me, or at least they don't work as efficiently as how I like to do them. The result is very different work that usually gets graded down for not following criteria precisely. Most of the time it's just because I find the criteria counterproductive, "required" or not. And it always happens in classes I love. In high school, English; in college, public speaking, history, creative writing...
It doesn't help that sometimes the professors have something factually incorrect, I can't correct them without undermining their authority over the class, and I'm thus stuck keeping track of a set of inaccurate information to include in my essays!
I don't know what the point of this thread is except to vent angst. And can I get an "Amen," brothers?
A merry Argh! to you all.
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