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Nomes ([info]onaga) wrote in [info]otf_wank,
@ 2007-02-11 09:19:00


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Over in academics_anon, [info]kataplexis declares that accepting emailed assignments is an unfair burden for professors.

Apparently, this statement is horribly bigoted against disabled students, and wank ensues.

ETA that the post is now locked, but the comm has open membership. However, for those too lazy to bother, the text:

I don't accept assignments over email. I did once term but had a bunch of students pull the "But I emailed it to you..." line knowing that there was no way for me to confirm or refute their statement. I have since gone to a "no assignments by email" policy. I am curious to see what others think about accepting assignments over email. I don't have a tablet PC so grading it digitally is not a "perk" option. That being the case, I see no benefit and only angst to be had from accepting emailed assignments.

EDIT: Just so everyone knows that I am not some evil meanie, there are always exceptions to every rule on a syllabus to account for emergency situations or to accommodate students with disabilities that might prevent them from attending class on a certain day. Frankly, I am pretty appalled that people would think me so dim as to not have such exception. This whole straw man argument about the "emergency" and "disability" situations needs to stop. It happens on every other post and leads to nothing but trouble. By this same argument, one could say that even asking a student to attend class is discriminatory and I refuse to accept any such argument as valid.


And the response that set off much of the wank, from [info]courtney8:

I don't mean to be rude, but I really hope you have exceptions to this rule.

My case in point - I have Meniere's disease and fibromyalgia, and am considered by my university to have a valid disability that sometimes prevents me from attending class. While I understand that it is my responsibility to make up whatever work I may have missed, I sometimes have needed to email assignments to my professors in order to do this.

Not allowing emailed assignments, in some cases, could be considered discriminatory, especially when students have documented disability status through their university. Please be careful with your rules, as you may not be aware of what kinds of limitations you are placing on your students.


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(Anonymous)
2007-02-12 01:08 am UTC (link)
I don't know about never getting an e-mail that has been sent, but one of my teachers who used to do e-mail submissions would get papers marked sent before the due date something like two weeks later because of the sheer volume of e-mails with decent-sized attachments being sent at the same time.

So considering that, and also the fact that I'm a paranoid freak who hates leaving papers in mailboxes out of fear that some sociopathic classmate who didn't do hir work might take it and reproduce it as hir own (srsly, it happened to someone in my mom's class once!), I'm still all in favor of hard copies that go directly in the hands of a professor/TA.

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[info]ladyvorkosigan
2007-02-12 01:11 am UTC (link)
Although I've had professors lose my hardcopy before too and then forget all about it. I'm definitely a fan of the written acknowledgment of receipt, whether by e-mail or some sort of check mark on a list or something. :-)

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]rachel_pi
2007-02-12 02:43 am UTC (link)
I actually kind of liked the system they had at the university I studied abroad at. Every student had to submit a cover sheet on their written work. You got the sheet time and date stamped and then there were three copies, one for you, one for the department office and one for the professor. Hard proof that you turned something in on time.

Maybe I just liked it because I'm completely paranoid, though. ^^

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