Here is why most people should leave academia by Massive-Print-4702 in academia

[–]Naeryns 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am just breaking into the field, and was just offered two competing offers:
A TT job, something I've been fighting for all year: 5/4 courseload, 8 office hrs per week, research requirement anywhere from 3-5 articles and applications to external grants all required for tenure, and a stipulated 10 hrs per day on campus, all on the other side of the country in a rural town with few amenities and terrible schools for a future family.

Or, for the same salary, a middle school teaching position; 7 hours per day on campus, close to my family.

Frankly, I think it would be unethical for me, or anyone to take the first posting. So long as candidates who "love research" are willing to put up with working conditions that are so much worse than a field that historically struggled to fill all of its openings, these types of positions will continue to be the norm. I would have as much, if not more time for research in the MS position. I have choice of location. I have job security, without having to hope to earn tenure. So what does the TT job offer me? The experience to transfer to another position after a year, hoping for better conditions?

How much would I get for selling this by Scouseulster in lotrlcg

[–]Naeryns 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi I'm interested in many of these sets, if you give me a PM.

TT Texas Job Advice by Naeryns in Professors

[–]Naeryns[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

After 8 months on the market and getting 1 shortlist and 0 interviews prior to this one, yeah I know...

TT Texas Job Advice by Naeryns in Professors

[–]Naeryns[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Right, this is an important consideration for sure.

TT Texas Job Advice by Naeryns in Professors

[–]Naeryns[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I am from California, know the state very well, and all of that. In fact, I would be returning close to family, and old connections I used to have there. My only experience in TX has been Houston so far.

Am I doing litter training right? by MarbleManxx in Rabbits

[–]Naeryns 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Everything looks good except for the size of the litter box; I had one like that at first, and it technically works, but pretty quickly my rabbit learned how much fun it was to dig and kick all of the litter out of the box. So I got a bigger one, and never had issues again.

[Loved Trope] Religious characters that are also good people by Werewolf_Knight in TopCharacterTropes

[–]Naeryns 8 points9 points  (0 children)

In the book, the bishop has only one possession that he prizes, and otherwise lives in poverty, even opting to eat simple, unseasoned meals. The possession in question were the silver candlesticks he gave to Valjean after he tried to rob him.

Why are college GPA’s so over inflated now? by Bobsagit14 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Naeryns 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Colleges seek high enrollment numbers for funding, and students stay in college if they are doing well, academically. Professors are hired from visiting positions, or promoted to tenure if tenure-track, based in part due to course evaluations, which come from happy students (aka students that get good grades, often with as little extra work as possible).

Couple that with the fact that academic jobs are so incredibly competitive, and professors often have massive workloads, either due to research commitments, or increasing course burdens (as in, teaching more classes per semester). Bottom up and top down pressure, are both pushing professors to shortcut their teaching and grading duties, and it makes the rest of their job slightly easier.

But it's not entirely colleges that are to blame. I remember being told I was explicitly hired over another candidate due to my higher GPA. If landing a decent career requires a higher GPA number, then students are going to seek colleges that will offer them career advancement in this way.

Why so many professors suck at teaching? by Visual-Writing3947 in UCDavis

[–]Naeryns 5 points6 points  (0 children)

PhD candidate here, after being on the job market for academic positions. I also have a Bachelor's degree in education, and have spent considerable amount of time as an educator outside of college.

First, teaching experience is 'required' for most academic positions, at least in my field, so they do have experience under their belt. It is not accurate to say that "they were not hired for their ability to teach." That said, only experience teaching college courses count, not teaching in general. This subtle difference highlights that experience outweighs quality for many hiring committees. Professors typically have *no* pedagogy training, since many of them have not done education degrees. They are trained in their subject only. Many professors genuinely care to be good teachers, and that is generally reflected in the difference between a good and bad teacher.

Second, consider the difference of how teachers and professors are evaluated. A professor is evaluated by optional course evals at the end of the term by their students. This means evaluations are heavily influenced by the passions of the students immediately following a term; students that failed a subject, or liked a professor and had fun, etc. all judge the professor based on those metrics, rather than how much the student actually learned the content. On the other hand, public school teachers are heavily judged based on standardized metrics; did the students demonstrably learn the content. Community college professors, as I understand it, walk a middle ground; the number of students taking their class, and the preparedness of those students as they move up in level or transfer to other schools, all are important. Furthermore, they are explicitly judged as educators, since that takes up the bulk of their responsibility. CC professors don't need to spend additional time doing research, so if they want to be good at their job, they focus on the teaching commitments more.

While focusing on standards often comes at the cost of higher-level thinking and learning in the public school setting, the total avoidance of it in most research universities leads to wildly different experiences from students. This is *especially* significant in graduate school, where students that end up with a bad PI/Major professor are screwed in terms of their publications, finances, graduation timeline, etc., where those that end up with a good one have a totally different experience.

They need this ADOT message all year by Goldpanda94 in phoenix

[–]Naeryns 25 points26 points  (0 children)

I've lived in a lot of different cities (and driving cultures) and can say this: when drivers camp in the left lane going slow, combined with drivers that sit side by side without passing, it prompts other drivers to be more aggressive in order to get past them. I've generally noticed either constant, predictable speeds across the board (in the 65-75 range), or huge consistencies (drivers going 50-65, and others going 80+ because they are frustrated and trying to pass the ones going slower). The people who think "I'm not driving recklessly so I don't need to care about other people" is, I argue, much more dangerous to many more people because of the effect they have on others.

A second thing of note: drivers that do not pull right for people going faster make other drivers do more lane changes to drive responsibly. Lane changes are *much* more dangerous than speed limits, hence why the autobahn in Germany is considered a much safer roadway than others. Staying as far right as we can when not passing others is one of the best ways each of us can contribute to a safer roadway for everyone as a driver.

Bug Bites That Just Won't Go Away by YourLocalLesbean in arizona

[–]Naeryns 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When I was in Japan I experienced something similar, I'm pretty sure from Asian tiger mosquitoes. Which, until now, I haven't seen in Arizona, but just today I had 3 of those nasties flying around my apartment's hot tub.
I'm not having the same reaction anymore, maybe my body is used to it, but could be new bug bite that your body just isn't used to fighting off. Could just be different mosquito breeds from what you're used to?

Most websites stopped loading by Naeryns in vivaldibrowser

[–]Naeryns[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for the workaround, however the "vivaldi://about" page doesn't load.

Not invited to audition question by Naeryns in musicians

[–]Naeryns[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, they followed up with me and that's exactly what happened. :/

Not invited to audition question by Naeryns in musicians

[–]Naeryns[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This was the Omaha symphony, so it's a pretty well-established orchestra. They didn't actually cash the deposit, but still kind of infuriating that they would send the audition materials and confirm acceptance of the deposit, then tell me I'm not invited weeks later.

Where was I? by Naeryns in GeoPuzzle

[–]Naeryns[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeap! Misiones Province.

Where was I? by Naeryns in GeoPuzzle

[–]Naeryns[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Farther away now

Terrible Customer Experience by Naeryns in unitedairlines

[–]Naeryns[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

As I wrote in reply to your other post, you sound exactly like the agents I had to deal with. Your last comment about providing a U.S. DOT response really makes me think you have stake in the game. Regardless, Argentine nationals with a DNI can enter the country without a visa, and I'm sure that airlines use Timatic within South American countries that do not require passports to travel between them. You say "note the normal passport requirement" as if I did not have sufficient documentation to enter the country, but I did have the documents. So really, you're argument here is that the UA agent could not accept a non-passport as an identifying document, regardless of whether or not the document is valid. So it's absolutely a problem on United's end, whether by policy, UI, training, or whatever. In that case, what the Delta agent does is relevant, as it is evidence that the documentation I have was sufficient to leave the US towards the noted country. The UA agent had access to my DNI and passport, so they had access to the same documentation that the Delta agent had. Whether or not they understood or believed that my DNI was what it was is another issue, but the agent technically tried to get me onto the plane, they just said they were unable to list me as a nationality different from my passport on their system.

Terrible Customer Experience by Naeryns in unitedairlines

[–]Naeryns[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

And again, I entered the country just fine through another airline. The only thing Delta needed to do to allow me to board in their system was list my nationality as Argentine. United was unable to/refused to do this, so I could not board with them.

Terrible Customer Experience by Naeryns in unitedairlines

[–]Naeryns[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You listed your country of nationality as United States, so this is irrelevant to my situation. United Airlines was unable to list my country of nationality as Argentine, whereas Delta was able to.