English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I took a Business Law class, and just got my grade of 2.1. I am a 3.8 average student. The teacher I had wasn't that great. When he lectured he would go right from the book, topic after topic. He didn't attend regularly and sometime didn't even tell us he wasn't coming. He said he gets migraines when there is a drastic change in the weather. He gave us two assignments throughout the entire quarter and we didn't get the back and graded until the last day of class, and the same with the midterm. Should I appeal this grade or go to his supervisor?

2007-06-19 16:49:12 · 8 answers · asked by T T 2 in Education & Reference Primary & Secondary Education

8 answers

Take responsibility for yourself and either accept the class or re-take it. Even if the professor isn't great, it is your responsibility as a student to ask questions during the course of the semester, speak to the professor during office hours or before/after class, and study all the material. If you didn't bother to be responsible for your studies over the semester, don't bother with appealing the grade.

Too many students these days whine about poor grades when in reality, most simply didn't bother to accept responsibility early on. You earn grades through your work. You're not entitled to high marks simply because you average a high G.P.A.

2007-06-19 17:00:33 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

Lecturers can be very defensive about their behaviours. You should talk to the lecturer and ask "Can you have another look at the thing? Or offer me a chance to redo the assessment?". If the answer is negative, you will threaten going to the supervisor. Often when you do this the supervisor might force the lecturer togrant you another attempt but the marking will be pretty strict on this one.

Negotiate first, threaten action later. That's what I think the right approach. if you show them some respect, they know that they need to treat you with respect. Be firm but not offensive.

2007-06-19 19:52:02 · answer #2 · answered by dmaivn 3 · 0 0

I think that you should appeal the grade IF you can do it on the basis of the work that you prepared for the two assignments, that I assume, your grade was based upon. If you can prove that you fulfilled the stated expectations of the class/professor, then you have a shot. I do not think that arguing on the basis of the teacher's performance would be strong enough - and would be perceived as weak and after the thought. (I think that the department head would ask why you didn't file a complaint sooner - not after you got your grade). Good luck.

2007-06-19 17:17:42 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It seems that you're blaming the teacher for your low grade. If the majority of the students did poorly relative to their former grades, you might have grounds for appeal. There is no law obliging a teacher to give a certain number of tests, so this complaint would be invalid. I would speak to my classmates before instigating any action against the teacher. You might, however, speak with the teacher himself and ask what your weak points are and how you might improve them in future.

2007-06-20 01:13:18 · answer #4 · answered by Elaine P...is for Poetry 7 · 0 1

I been with the aid of this in intense college. All you do is shop a replica of your information of why the grade became unfair, then pass to the counsler and teach her. The counsler will say she would be able to do not something or will declare to have talked to the instructor, and prefer in all circumstances no instructor will admit guilt. then you definitely tell the counsler you prefer to fulfill with the assistant primary, and your mothers and fathers to talk the situation. I did that and ended up triumphing, yet I had a sturdy case that became sparkling decrease. stable success!

2016-10-18 02:39:54 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I would not appeal the grade because it was your responsibility to ask the teacher questions if you did not understand the work set.If you were concerned about the work then you should have spoken to a counsellor or principal or your parents to ensure that you had a regular teacher on tap .

2007-06-19 17:33:58 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

I would appeal to take the class over and have the grade replace your existing one by being scrubbed off your transcript. That's all you can honestly ask for.

And your existing gpa has no bearing on the case.

2007-06-19 19:25:42 · answer #7 · answered by iSpeakTheTruth 7 · 0 0

I would appeal it...I figure you have every right to fight for higher marks...especially if you are paying for the class. When I was in college, I very seldom accepted the first mark on an exam. I always referred to the first mark as the instructors "opening offer"

2007-06-19 16:54:10 · answer #8 · answered by Wanderer 2 · 0 2

fedest.com, questions and answers