Sunday, November 25, 2007
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It's happened happened to pretty much everyone who’s ever taken a college class — your professor thinks he knows what he’s doing with a simple piece of technology, but doesn’t. Sure, it doesn’t have the easy user-interface of a blackboard, or the simple startup procedure of a textbook, but hey, how hard can it be to figure out in the first five minutes, right?
Well, because he won’t admit that he’s clueless, the doomsday scenario plays out: for the first half hour or so the class stares in amazement — while texting their friends furiously — as he fiddles with buttons or browsers or dials or PowerPoint lectures and makes himself look like a fool. Please, kids, help this hypothetically flustered academic and just do it for him. Yeah, he probably knows more about self-enforcing Italian political systems than you, but that doesn’t mean he knows how to restart a computer or minimize a browser.

Of course, this would all be just hilarious and we could all surreptitiously laugh about it and call him a jackass later that night at the bars, except stop to think about it for a second: we’re dropping some pretty serious tuition dollars for this professor to mess around in class under the pretense of teaching us.

Let’s get something straight here: technology is complicated, and it’s unreasonable to expect every professor to understand the nuances of digital projectors, editing software, classroom response devices, PowerPoint lectures or even — God help you if this is true — Internet browsers.


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