In my experience, the typical Professor [I'm married to one] has so many students that you really have to work at being boorish or worse to make them dislike you.
And, most colleges or Universities do have explicit guides for campus behavior and do expect that [for example] drunken frat boy stuff {"Animal House"} will not be permitted to recur because the perps will be booted.
Naturally, Professors and other adults are their first line of discovering such unacceptable behavior. Some won't participate with the "Honor Code" and some see the value in it.
GL
2007-06-03 16:38:08
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answer #1
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answered by Spock (rhp) 7
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That will vary from professor to professor. If it falls within their job duties to report non-academic violations, then I think they might just be doing their job and don't have any personal animosity or dislike towards the student. But if a professor went out of his way .... then perhaps they do dislike the student.
It also depends on the violation and how the student handles the situation. I've turned students in for academic violations (plagiarism) and have some deny it despite all of the evidence. I don't think much of those students. I've also had students apologize profusely, I tend to look more favorably on them. Well, that was until I caught such a student plagiarizing a second time. While I had no personal dislike for the student, I sure didn't care to have them in my class.
2007-06-03 16:43:29
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answer #2
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answered by Citizen for President 2
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Misconduct, not academically related and your instructor doesn't know you? I'm not sure how that's possible, other than failing to attend class while receiving financial aid.
Go discuss it with your instructor. You'd be surprised what happens when you take the initiative.
2007-06-03 17:25:36
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answer #3
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answered by muppetkiller_2000 5
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Dislike? Not necessarily. They may just be following procedure - that's their job.
2007-06-03 16:35:12
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answer #4
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answered by hollyfaer 2
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