I have been lecturing for almost six years. Lecturing was my initial dream job. When I got my dream job at the age of 25, I was the youngest lecturer without Ph.D. in this highly competitive field.
The subjects I was lecturing include but are not limited to the areas of linguistics and education.
Fast forward six years, I hit the plateau. That was why I took an indefinite break from teaching.
While other teachers who are Government-bonded didn't have this privilege, I realized that I was indeed spoilt with the choice of having an indefinite sabbatical (even though I am not on their payroll during this break, but I'm okay with it).
In reality, I returned to my self and asked if this shall be one of my life pursuits, worth pursuing or not.
Despite the good pay, flexible hours and fantastic course coordinators, deep down, I was disgusted with the workings of our education system.
From flawed syllabi created by non-educators to the lack of teaching support from schools and university, educators are expected to put up with the BS, churned as the outcome from our nonsensical system.
One of the BS I had to endure painfully was the case of a student who wanted to sue me.
It happened semesters ago when I was marking her assignment. She did poorly and so; I gave her a C.
But she thought she deserved it better (without asking me why she'd fared so badly)
So she pulled the trick like how some entitled, rich kids would.
She called for the University to interfere.
The Uni called, of course. I wasn't in trouble and not going to be because they thought her work was a C.
However, as C-deserving as she does, she settled for a B, without querying what went wrong with her work (red flag alert for grade hoarders. All that matters is the As and not the learning process)
I told the Uni that she should be grateful I didn't give her an F because my C was indeed a lenient leeway.
Lecturer - 0, Student - 1
All because of the money.
The educators have become their employee. You're obliged to give them better results, just because they're your paying customer. The educators are no longer the nurturer, but the grades provider.
That's when I started becoming more judgmental. As much I tried not too, I can't swallow the bitter fact that as long as you're filthy rich, you can do whatever you want or have everything your way.
And it doesn't seem to matter how they'd get it done. What only matters is that you're certified, notwithstanding the quality of your education.
As much as I want to advocate for quality education, and I still do with my students from all walks of life (and age), I sighed with disappointment and maybe a slight sliver of hope that someday, somehow we can all make a tiny difference to this flawed social order.
The hope that someone out there truly wants to learn not for the sake of her/his grades but sincerely wanting to improve and grow through trials and errors.
Final thoughts
As an educator, my hope is for my students to become better lifelong learners.
If you've ever gotten a low grade from your lecturer, you should most definitely reach out to him/her and ask why did you do badly in the first place. Take it from there and improve rather than complaining to the Uni.
Obviously, the Uni will do their best to get you better grades for the sake of shutting you up, since you're the paying customer. But this 'privilege' still won't change the fact that you still suck in your work.
At the end of the day, you're still the same old C student, despite the fact that you got a B now.
And as your educator, I'd rather you'd be a better C student, than an empty can of B novice.
Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts. — Winston Churchill
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certs to me are just paper... kids / teenagers / young adults now wants to work in places where there are beanbags, coffee machines, grass carpets.
None of them have gone through lives we all have been.
SEMUA MAU SENANG.
Those who are reporting under are all with certs but with lack of ability to influence the ecosystem. Failed to the max...
I am without any certs for that matter... just graduated from hard knocks university of Malaysia...
hahahahahaha..
Take it easy Debbie. Not easy being an educator... my mom is a teacher, thanked God she has retire... or else, she'll be on stress pill.
Tell me about it @carolfung.. This is so true
everybody wants the easy way out with high pay, high life but didn't wanna work hard for it. Thanks for your kind words Carol. Appreciate it...
ps: and I'm glad that your mom has retired happily. Salute to her... not easy being a teacher for many years!
Great story.. but look at the big picture:
True to point one. but money drives a system, but doesn't necessarily make it better. Talents and good people do. It's like doing a business whether you're doing it just for the money, or adding value altogether. To me, i choose money AND TO ADD value :) so if I can't produce decent students, I have failed someway or the other @orangila
In the name of profit and fame.
Question is, would the university hire the students they passed with flying colors?
Exactly ! I'm sure you've encountered plenty of 'quality' students too huh? That's why interviews based on resumes are no longer accurate. Put them to real-time tests.
It is a real shame that the people who employ you would not back you, even though they agreed in your grade that you had given. It would not surprise me one bit that the student will or at least thought about suing the school after they completed their studies, claiming that they didn't get a "properly " evaluated education and were passed on even though their work was sub par . The Uni might think twice should that situation ever take place. Our local K -12 school district had that happen. The school district had to pay for the student to attend a private school, plus pay damages that amounted to over $500,000 USD for pain and suffering from the traumatic experience of graduating without being able to read and write above a fourth grade level.
wow ... that's so sad ... can't believe the situation is even worse than it actually is. I guess it's a world renowned problem and not just in Asia. Like @karinzdailygrind said, it's the generation's entitled mindset that needs to go. thanks for shedding light to this matter...@sultnpapper
I am sure that it is like this in many places, just most of the time an out of court settlement keeps people quiet about the out comes.
@originalworks @qurator
Am really motivated reading this
Thanks @xaviour i hope so
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Haha macam the same thing happen to my ex-Uni, as long as ada money, janji pass with flying colour.
Cert of degree doesn't mean anything in nowadays
kan ? sigh... students these days. all that matters is where the cert is from. you'd be surprised that most of them don't even know how to research effectively.
Good pay? What school district do you work for? :) Just kidding I see that you must have been at a University or other post secondary institution. Things are very different these days in terms of entitlement and support from your employers. Sadly that is something that spreads across all areas of education from K through college. -@bozz
lol @bozz yeah you're right. I'm actually a lecturer so I get paid by the hour. And totally agreed with your statement on this:
yeaps education these days. money reigns
Great share, and something people should be aware of. This should be addressed and I believe the tip of the financial iceberg we have created here with our monetary system. Money shouldn't be the boss. Ever.
Thanks @mental-extract :)
My pleasure.
this is great honest work. I truly agree with you. Many students do their work half the effort just because they know they have the money to back them up. They're not there for the learning at all, but are only after graduating. In fact, one of the saddest things I heard firsthand when I was in school, was from my classmates saying they weren't after getting honors, they simply wanted to graduate. All the while, they would cheat and copy each other's work.
Honestly, I'd rather they learn it well. If she fails, she can ask me why and I'll guide her through. Then she may choose to redo her work and resubmit. That- I appreciate her effort and will award her with better grades if she's up to that standard @kdee916
Wow. Sueing you for a C @deborism? Hmm the attitude of entitlement is really serious in that social class Huh? I'm tutoring some Datuk and Datin's kids and yeah I get that attitude too. Paid me to wanna see the results of their kids to be on the top, but canceling classes as and when they like until I put my foot down and told them I'm leaving. The children now study and behave goodie good before the parents but not having the joy of learning. Hmmmm when the parents see their results from the exams, they would suddenly buy more books for the children and transfer them to a "better" international school, not knowing the children had to forsake the friendships in the previous school and no negotiation is allowed haha. I'm just coping with them, honestly.
I feel you @happycrazycon and to be honest, I'm not sure if I can stand with that kinda pressure you're getting. Wanna cancel classes yet get As? Well unless you're steve jobs or elon musk, it's unlikely to happen haha! Entitled much? Sigh
@debbie... Teachers and Educators have lost their 'identity' because of the system. Sad to say, nowadays, education has lost its substance.
@catherinelim you need to tag me @deborism in steemit haha but thanks :) yes I feel your words. It's true. but of course they are more bad educators than good ones so it's also a sad case for the kids.
I personally feel more than just the education system, it is also the change of the current generation's mindset. The feeling of entitlement is rather strong among the millennials, which is why they often felt they deserved more than what they are getting without taking a step back to reflect if they truly deserved the grades. And that just makes the job as an educator a lot tougher, not to mention the yo-yo policy by the Education Ministry
This reminds me of this post by WaitButWhy on the extreme differences in expectations some of these/us young people see.
Basically, they have an unrealistic view of what they "deserve", and were never informed of the amount of work they'd really have to put in to get there.
I had a tiny period...maybe a year or so, where I also felt like the world was completely unfair and everyone should just give me everything.
Luckily that coincided more or less with my year in Australia and learning that if I didn't put in some work instead of whining, I'd never get anywhere XD
I'll always tell people that I was an insufferable jerk (at least on the inside given I was pretty asocial at the time) and would have continued being like that had I not accepted my dad's "gift" of a 1 year trip and working visa in Australia XD
I hope everybody including the students will have that "moment of enlightenment" like you did. Thanks for your honest words and appreciate it @pbock. Be good and keep steemin' towards success :) you're all good ...
You're so right @karinzdailygrind and i couldn't agree more, especially this phrase:
guess it starts with their upbringing and the most basic unit of society- family. In the Japanese culture, if you fail as an individual the whole family fails with you. Even though our reality is not as morbid as theirs, it still says a lot about one's culture, respect, and quality upbringing. Like I always said, "People love the Japanese and their culture, but nobody really wanna be a perfect and respectful as them. They just love the results not the process ...."
@deborism this is Tim Lee from Steemit Bootcamp on 3 Feb 2018. Please follow me thank you.
This is not how you leave a comment dude lol