This happened at work recently, and I thought I'd throw it to the Fratching community.
This is an issue with a student at the college where I work. I didn't witness it, but she has spoken to me about it, and I've talked to some of the faculty members close to the situation.
We started a new term last week. On the first day of one of her classes, the instructor was a few minutes late. Moments before class was supposed to begin, her husband called her on her cell phone. She went out in the hallway and answered it. While talking to him, she spotted the instructor coming down the hallway. She said to her husband through the phone that she thought she saw the instructor coming and would have to go soon.
As the instructor walked by her, he said, "Yeah, class is about to start, so you need to get off your phone."
She looked at him aghast and said, "Are you joking?" She apparently thought it was rude for him to tell her to get off her cell phone. Later on she would accuse him of getting into her conversation with her husband.
"No," the instructor answered. "We're about to start."
After this, she gets really angry, feeling like she's been disrespected. She and the instructor have a little back and forth, and he takes her out in the hallway to talk with her about it. She says he talked to her about her attitude and suggested it needed adjusted. He also (according to her) said that she absolutely did not want him as an adversary. This ticked her off some more, and when they went back into the room, she gathered her stuff up and told him in front of the class that she was dropping the class because she wasn't sitting through a class where she was going to be disrespected.
After this, she storms off to the department head's office to complain to him. She said he started making comparisons to work situations, saying, "Well, what if you were on a job and your supervisor told you to get off your phone and get back to your work area." She told him that comparison didn't fly because in that situation, she would be getting paid to do work. "You all don't pay me," she said. "I pay you. It's all about the Benjamins."
She and the department head went to discuss this with her instructor, and apparently the department head took the instructor's side, which made this student even madder. She stormed out out of the building saying she was doing to drop out of the school.
Forty-five minuts later, she returned and spoke with the student services director and the campus director. Then, she finally returned to the class and was angry that the instructor had marked her absent for the three hours she'd spent complaining to other staff members about him. She insisted that she should not be marked absent because she was still in the building. She was also angry to find out that he factored attendance in with students' grades (again with the "I pay you" thing).
Yesterday, the student, the instructor, and the student's academic advisor sat down and had a long talk, and apparently they worked everything out and all is fine now.
Assuming I have this story right, I think the instructor probably shouldn't have thrown in that "you don't want me as an adversary" line. However, I don't see how being told to get off your cell phone and come to class is cause for such anger. Granted, maybe the instructor was abrupt about saying it---possible, since he has a loud voice and can be blunt at times. Also, that "I pay you" mentality gets under my skin. In the college world, you get some students who think that because they pay tuition, they could be able to call the shots and not be asked to do anything they don't want to do.
This is an issue with a student at the college where I work. I didn't witness it, but she has spoken to me about it, and I've talked to some of the faculty members close to the situation.
We started a new term last week. On the first day of one of her classes, the instructor was a few minutes late. Moments before class was supposed to begin, her husband called her on her cell phone. She went out in the hallway and answered it. While talking to him, she spotted the instructor coming down the hallway. She said to her husband through the phone that she thought she saw the instructor coming and would have to go soon.
As the instructor walked by her, he said, "Yeah, class is about to start, so you need to get off your phone."
She looked at him aghast and said, "Are you joking?" She apparently thought it was rude for him to tell her to get off her cell phone. Later on she would accuse him of getting into her conversation with her husband.
"No," the instructor answered. "We're about to start."
After this, she gets really angry, feeling like she's been disrespected. She and the instructor have a little back and forth, and he takes her out in the hallway to talk with her about it. She says he talked to her about her attitude and suggested it needed adjusted. He also (according to her) said that she absolutely did not want him as an adversary. This ticked her off some more, and when they went back into the room, she gathered her stuff up and told him in front of the class that she was dropping the class because she wasn't sitting through a class where she was going to be disrespected.
After this, she storms off to the department head's office to complain to him. She said he started making comparisons to work situations, saying, "Well, what if you were on a job and your supervisor told you to get off your phone and get back to your work area." She told him that comparison didn't fly because in that situation, she would be getting paid to do work. "You all don't pay me," she said. "I pay you. It's all about the Benjamins."
She and the department head went to discuss this with her instructor, and apparently the department head took the instructor's side, which made this student even madder. She stormed out out of the building saying she was doing to drop out of the school.
Forty-five minuts later, she returned and spoke with the student services director and the campus director. Then, she finally returned to the class and was angry that the instructor had marked her absent for the three hours she'd spent complaining to other staff members about him. She insisted that she should not be marked absent because she was still in the building. She was also angry to find out that he factored attendance in with students' grades (again with the "I pay you" thing).
Yesterday, the student, the instructor, and the student's academic advisor sat down and had a long talk, and apparently they worked everything out and all is fine now.
Assuming I have this story right, I think the instructor probably shouldn't have thrown in that "you don't want me as an adversary" line. However, I don't see how being told to get off your cell phone and come to class is cause for such anger. Granted, maybe the instructor was abrupt about saying it---possible, since he has a loud voice and can be blunt at times. Also, that "I pay you" mentality gets under my skin. In the college world, you get some students who think that because they pay tuition, they could be able to call the shots and not be asked to do anything they don't want to do.
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