- Joined
- Jul 27, 2010
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- 30,543
I was panicking like a whore in church about an hour ago...
To begin with, the nightmare that many successful students have is that you wake up one morning and realize that morning is the final for a difficult class that you didn't attend all year. Not only that, but you don't know where the room to take the test is located and you're late!
Welp, this is my final semester for an MA in History. I take Oral and Written exams to gain the degree. Last night I was looking at a web page devoted to this and there were no review questions. I wasn't worried because I assumed that Sept 25 was when the review questions from three professors would be posted and nothing was. Other classes useing this same format would use that date as a due date and not a post by date. I began to think this because my University started back up in mid August and I had nothing yet from this "class." I emailed the professor coordinating this graduate committe of three to see when the questions would be submitted, and then her questions appeared magically on the website with no explanation.
Just for her specialty (American Colonial History) she had 2 questions that covered two pages, requiring the synthesis of 9 sources. The first question had to do with creating a college level course for early colonial history, which engages the main theses of the sources into a sophisticated central idea. Explain why the students should care about the central idea. There is more to the question but that's too much minutiae for this forum
The second question is the development of American slavery. Where did it come from? How did it begin? How did it evolve? or did it evolve? One of the sources is Many Thousand Gone by Ira Berlin, which is several hundred pages long (great book) itself., let alone the other 8 sources.
Just this one of three professors review questions were given me today to be answered/completed by Sept 25, and I hadn't recieved 2/3rds of the questions. It was the nightmare in a slightly different form. Would my years of post graduate work go up in flames? I am still trying to recover (It was as I originally thought, the profs have until Sept 25th to submit questions, not that I have to turn in some paper amswering those questions by Sept 25th)
Anyway, tell me your nightmare that came true....or almost came true..
To begin with, the nightmare that many successful students have is that you wake up one morning and realize that morning is the final for a difficult class that you didn't attend all year. Not only that, but you don't know where the room to take the test is located and you're late!
Welp, this is my final semester for an MA in History. I take Oral and Written exams to gain the degree. Last night I was looking at a web page devoted to this and there were no review questions. I wasn't worried because I assumed that Sept 25 was when the review questions from three professors would be posted and nothing was. Other classes useing this same format would use that date as a due date and not a post by date. I began to think this because my University started back up in mid August and I had nothing yet from this "class." I emailed the professor coordinating this graduate committe of three to see when the questions would be submitted, and then her questions appeared magically on the website with no explanation.
Just for her specialty (American Colonial History) she had 2 questions that covered two pages, requiring the synthesis of 9 sources. The first question had to do with creating a college level course for early colonial history, which engages the main theses of the sources into a sophisticated central idea. Explain why the students should care about the central idea. There is more to the question but that's too much minutiae for this forum
The second question is the development of American slavery. Where did it come from? How did it begin? How did it evolve? or did it evolve? One of the sources is Many Thousand Gone by Ira Berlin, which is several hundred pages long (great book) itself., let alone the other 8 sources.
Just this one of three professors review questions were given me today to be answered/completed by Sept 25, and I hadn't recieved 2/3rds of the questions. It was the nightmare in a slightly different form. Would my years of post graduate work go up in flames? I am still trying to recover (It was as I originally thought, the profs have until Sept 25th to submit questions, not that I have to turn in some paper amswering those questions by Sept 25th)
Anyway, tell me your nightmare that came true....or almost came true..