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#1 |
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Member [27%]
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1. Ben:
2. Jake: Talking about ground tissue in a herbaceous monocot (note, this is Q2: What qualities do you appreciate in a teaching assistant? |
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#2 |
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Core Member [408%]
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I hated all of my TA's. I thought they were jerks... because they were jerks.
Of course, when I became a TA and saw what they have to put up with, it made more sense. When I became a faculty member, I got my own TA's. Everybody wanted to be Monte's TA, because I didn't trust them, so I didn't let them do ANYTHING... I didn't want them talking to my students, grading papers, ... NOTHIN'. Being Monte's TA was a free ride. Now I don't even take TA's anymore. Let 'em mess up someone else's students.... |
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#3 |
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Veteran Member [55%]
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What exactly are Teaching Assistants in the University context?-- we don't have them here (UK).
I had a DPhil student supervise my thesis because it was on the same subject as his DPhil thesis, would he be considered a TA? |
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#4 |
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Core Member [408%]
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Teaching assistants (TA's) are generally first or second-year graduate students who handle grading, lab classes, and problem sessions for faculty. More senior graduate student TA's often serve as adjuncts, teaching (undergraduate) classes of their own. They usually receive free tuition and a small stipend.
I actually served as a TA for a professor in a couple of graduate classes while I was still an undergraduate (since I started my Masters Degree while an undergrad). I graded his students' homework papers, but had no professional contact with his students. |
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#5 | |||
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Member [23%]
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Dr Phil is now a university lecturer? what channel is it on? |
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#6 |
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Veteran Member [55%]
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So as a TA you would be grading etc straight after your Bachelor's (or not in Monte's case)? Wow, that seems pretty inexperienced (particularly when the American Bachelor's are less specialized and more supervised than they are here)... you're not allowed near any sort of teaching/marking etc here until about your second year of a PHd-which would be, at the least, two years of further study on from your Bachelor's.
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#7 |
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Core Member [408%]
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Yes, it's great experience for the TA, but I don't know how good it is for their "victims". I don't tolerate it.
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#8 |
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Member [23%]
MBTI: INTJ
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 949
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The TAs in my major have all been great. Smart people with great senses of humor. I have become friends with many of them. Outside my major it's been a mixed bag... some clearly more interested in what they were doing than others, but nobody who was incompetent.
At my school the TAs usually run the lab sessions and grade homework. Test grading (beyond simple multiple-choice tests) is done by the professors. |
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#9 | |||
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Member [31%]
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So true - people expect TA's to be good teachers although absolutely nothing about the grad student admission process has any bearing on our teaching skills. My TA training basically consisted of this: |
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#10 |
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New Member [01%]
MBTI: INTJ
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 6
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My TAs as an undergrad were all outside of my major (physics). Now that I'm a grad student, I'm TAing an accelerated introductory physics class. My students are all physics majors, and are there because they are interested in the subject. It makes them a pleasure to teach. Furthermore, because it's accelerated, there are topics that are oftentimes glossed over by the professors, leaving me with two hour-long recitations a week to demonstrate my own examples, explore concepts from a different perspective, and mold the professors' words (there are two professors co-teaching the course) into a consistent format and notation that is more easily comprehensible to the students.
All in all, it's a ton of fun, and I have some students that skip lecture and only come to recitation. I would like to believe that not all TAs are bad, and not all TAing experiences have to be horrific. Yes, grading is a pain. We all know it, accept it, and move on. Fortunately, grading in physics is less subjective than in, say, a humanities class. My two cents. |
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#11 |
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Member [11%]
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Me. I was an undergrad TA for a 400 level herpetology course last semester as a junior.
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#12 |
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Member [13%]
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Think it is common in UK for undergraduate TA's to be PhD students. My genetics TA gave us all the answers for the little quiz at the end of practicals if you pressed him enough. It became a fun exercise to see how much you could get out of him.
Never really bonded with any of them though... |
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