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Rachel Yeats's avatar

Not in the US system so don't feel valid commenting on the more general aspects of this, but when it comes to women, I wonder how that would break down if analysed by field?

Anecdata for sure, but I've studied across four different disciplines and three different universities for a cumulative amount of undergrad years that is too embarrassing to admit, and I've seen massive variance in both gender ratios and relating to students depending on the faculty. Psych draws mostly female professors who have been, with the exception of one in I/O, an absolute nightmare to deal with. The few men were... fine, if a bit browbeaten by their colleagues. No Todd Kashdans anyway. On the other end, sports sci is very male dominated. The women in their midst are some of the most amazing humans I've ever had the fortune to meet (and barely a YouTube video in sight).

I guess I'm thinking, (and stats is not one of my fields...) that if the majority of students these days are female, and they're choosing, as they are, subjects where women are over represented in the faculty, and the gender imbalance there causes some sort of intrasexual competition/female dominance hierarchy/relational aggression that contributes to a culture that is less than ideal for the student body, then that data seems fairly valid, based of course on my entirely invalid n of 1.

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Antonio Iturra's avatar

At the end of the semester, I like to ask the students to provide direct feedback. And they usually do.

The student evaluations always sound like that this big giant that has the power to can out teachers. And not always as you eloquently say, the best evaluations aren't for thr best teachers.

And one thing also is for certain, they have also molded students. Curiosity looks a bit dormant on them and a lot of times they want the easy or predictable road. Even when I do fun stuff, they ask "when are we going to have a test"? As if tests were the only way to learn. Go figure.

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