Quote: Original post by nullsquaredQuote: Original post by phantom
Thus following on from that, using standard rounding rules, the answer would be 3:13.
I don't understand these "standard rounding rules."
If event A happens at 6:50 and you're asked at which hour this event happens, it would be at the 6th hour, not the 7th hour.
Without context, I'd say something happening at 6:50 is happening at 7, the 8th hour.
Quote: Original post by nilkn
In my completely anecdotal experience, I've noticed that there's a correlation between incompetence in a teacher and the teacher's unwillingness to compromise with students and listen to their ideas. For instance, I haven't had any problems like this with tenured professors, but I've had more problems like this than I can count on one hand with graduate student teachers. Am I the only one who has noticed this correlation?
I've noticed that tenured professors are pretty easy to get on with. I've only had one class taught by a grad student and she was pretty good, so I can't comment on that side. Non-tenured professors who don't get on well with students don't usually stick around very long so I haven't had to deal with them for more than a semester.
I've also noticed that even easy going professors have at least a few students with these sorts of complaints. My experience is that in these sorts of issues the arrogance tends to be the student's, not the professor's. High school is a little different because the teacher's more likely to give in in the name of the student's self-esteem whereas, in college, they're less likely to care about your wounded pride.