You would think that a teacher would be helpful right?

@sharone74 (4837)
United States
August 11, 2007 3:56am CST
As many of you know I am taking a distance learning course from the Axia College of the University of Phoenix. I did not notice last week when I turned in my assignment that it should be submitted as an attachment rather than cutting and pasting the assignment form into the message window, because when you cut and paste the form it does not transfer the equations (which are worth half of your grade)which are done with the math editor that they specifically make you use. It is written in the syllabus to post your answers to the individual forum. It does not specify as an attachment. and in his snippy little feedback message he tells me that my assignment was unsatisfactory this week but still fails to mention that all of my equations were missing and that I should submit it as an attachment! God I am furious!!!! The syullabus for all of my other classes specifies whether to submit your work as an attachment or not, I don't know why this one does not.
1 person likes this
2 responses
@fredgame (1260)
• China
25 Aug 07
you seem to know why the problem exist if not why don't you ask your tutor or a colleague who has gone through that before? There is a saying that if you want to know the right way, ask those returning from the ladder or the route. That's why "two is better than one" if the teacher's direction doesn't help then contact a colleague for the teacher isn't the master of all trade.
1 person likes this
• Canada
30 Aug 07
If there is a problem, a teacher needs to state what the problem is, rather than just how she/he feels about it. We all feel one way or another, but we need to back these feelings up with reasons. Where there are reasons, people will learn. This person is a teacher, so she needs to teach!!