Archive for the 'Academia' Category

My Workweek; My Work: Weak

I am lucky there were only four days this workweek, because if I’d had to deal with any of this crap on Monday, too, I would be a quivering pile of tapioca right about now.  As it is, I will sit back and sip a glorious and much deserved whiskey-soda while you can read all about the accumulation of small stresses and slights that have added up to make the past four days so frakking heinous.

Tuesday: I had to go back to work* a day early after the Labor Day Weekend because the school had scheduled an Honor Committee hearing about one of my plagiarizing students.  There is no more relaxing way to ease back into the swing than the prospect of confronting an angry and somewhat emotionally unstable student at a hearing where you will be speaking against him, in the early morning, on what is usually your day off*.  (I’ll post all the details about how this went soon!)

Wednesday: The two instructional librarians assigned to my Writing classes wanted to meet with me in person to discuss our plans for the library research sessions we’d be having this semester — this was a change from the usual carefree and casual emails we had exchanged to serve the same purpose last year. We met at the end of the afternoon, after I’d spent all day in the classroom and was already exhausted. Due to one librarian’s inability to end a conversation or to read my conversation-ending signals, the meeting dragged on for approximately 3x longer than it should have.  Forty-five minutes into it, at the peak of my frustration, the librarian (whom I’ve been working with for a year already) referred to me as a grad student.

Thursday: On my other day off*, I decided to come to campus for a couple of hours to do some reading so I could meet up with my friends at 5:00 and head to the big faculty reception for our college.  In academic jargon, “reception” equals “cocktail party,” so how could I go wrong?  Indeed, there was much fine food and fine wine, and it was — interestingly? — the second time in as many weeks that I had been served a form of grits disguised as hors d’œuvres at a school function.  On the other hand, the room was packed with hungry Liberal Arts professors elbowing their way around the inexplicable round buffet tables (NOTE: round buffet tables are geometrically unsound; this is science), and the various speeches were interminably long and overwhelmingly loud in the enormous marble hall.  Standing in heels for two hours on a marble floor, by the way, was also not fun.

Friday:
I had a lovely teaching day all through my first three classes, but I have unfortunately reached a breaking point regarding student participation with my fourth class. They are stubbornly silent no matter what I try to do, and I am already able to name the make and model of at least eight students’ cell phones.  Things are not great with them.  At one point today, they were supposed to be comparing two different writers’ descriptions of, let’s say, tulips. I was thrilled when one of the perpetually silent thugs in the back of the room raised his hand to make a contribution to the discussion.  “They’re both about, um, TULIPS,” he said.  At this point I had honestly lost my patience, and my response was ridiculously sarcastic.  Standing at the front of the room where I was making two lists on the board, “Writer A’s Tulips” and “Writer B’s Tulips,” I said something like, “Oh, they’re both about tulips, how true.  Should I write that on the list? Oh wait [circling the word "tulips" in the heading to each list], I already did write that. Because I am psychic.” It was not pretty. At least they laughed, though, proving that (despite most appearances) they are not all completely dead inside.

*A note on my “days off” - I don’t have to teach on Tuesdays or Thursdays, which means I normally get to lie around the house in my underwear sipping coffee and picking my nose, but it doesn’t mean I don’t have to work.  I am usually reading, writing, grading, or prepping in between nose picks.  So, they’re not really days off at all — I just resent the indignity of having to actually dress and go into school where I have to be pleasant and collegial with the people in the hallway and am not allowed to take breaks to watch One Life to Live.

Tedium, Happily Interrupted

So, yeah, school is starting again on Monday, and we are all in denial over here. The honorable and dutiful part of my brain kept telling me I was going to go into the office today and finish designing my writing course, but the sleazy and unreliable part of my brain kept me in bed until 12:30 and then chained to the couch after that. The most active thing I did today was head over to B.’s house to watch the latest Project Runway (regarding that: the show is quite entertaining this season, but many of the clothes are simply le suck).

Whenever the start of a new semester rolls around, it becomes time to start orchestrating the New Routine of Awesomeness. This is always far too ambitious, and the plans, as excellent as they may be, always wind up getting pushed aside in favor of lazy underachieving. Here are some examples of plans I have briefly considered, which have never come to fruition: waking at 5 every morning to go running, packing a gym bag for post-office-hours workout, packing healthy lunches every day, planning and reading a week ahead of time for classes, grading papers within a week after they’ve been submitted, avoiding happy hours during the week, coming into the office early to prepare for class, and showering every day.

Instead, of course, what evolves is more like this: waking just in time to throw on clothes and get to school, only walking/jogging with the dog on weekends and then only if the weather is in a specific 10-degree range, buying overpriced sandwiches at the coffeeshop for lunch, planning for classes at the last minute if at all, grading papers approximately two weeks after they’ve been submitted and only on the night before they absolutely must be returned, hitting 2-3 happy hours per week, and showering only when legally required.

Which is all just to lament that the best laid plans yada yada yada. Christ, I am boring myself now.

Well, my self-indulgent rant on the intricate disappointments of my personal schedule just got pre-empted by a few hours of phone-talk with friends C. and C. Lucky for us all! And now, with thoughts of school happily shuffled off for the time being, I shall sign out and leave this as it stands.

Apparently, They Have a 7:00 a.m. on Saturdays, Too.

I am sitting in my classroom right this very minute, watching my students take their final exam.  The summer session class is finally over — all but for the grading.  It has gone, unpredictably, very very well.  Maybe it is something about summer classes that make the students either more amenable to working harder, or maybe the students who sign up for classes over the summer are just over-achievers.  Either way, I just graded possibly the best batch of essays I have ever had.  Like, new-and-refreshing-takes-on-my-favorite-novel good.  Like there-were-multiple-A-plusses good.  Good good.  Shocking, and quite lovely.

Unfortunately, I caught a plagiarizer, so I’ll have to deal with that, but, you know: ups and downs, strikes and gutters.

Despite all the good good stuff that went on in the classroom over the last several weeks, I am quite happy for it to be over.  It’s been mentally exhausting.  It’s not just the sheer number of hours spent in the classroom (although that is a factor), but it’s the intensity of compressing a 16-week course into five weeks.  It’s the necessity of moving on to the next text, the next movement, the next genre; of moving inexorably forward every single day with no time to reflect or revisit.  That and all the grading, of course.  I am ready for a break.

For a while there, though, it seemed like I wasn’t going to get one.  There was the possibility of my picking up another summer-session class (to start this coming Monday, good glaven!), and teaching for the rest of the summer.  It would have been a great boon for my tired, whimpering bank account, let me tell you.  On the other hand, I have plenty of research planned for the summer: two articles need to be submitted for publication, and I need to start writing (or at least thinking about writing) two conference papers that I’ll be too busy to work on once fall semester starts.  Oh yeah, and I have to update my job dossier so I can get my ass into a position (metaphorical ass, metaphorical position) with the possibility of tenure (not to mention more big fat Hamiltons).  I have a lot of work cut out for me, and the free time I’ll have for it without taking on a second class will be crucial to my success.  Frankly, I couldn’t imagine how I could jump into another intensive summer session like the one I just had and still eke out any time for writing, let alone the kind of time I will realistically need.

I’m trying to look at the positives here:  plenty of writing time!  Although, of course, without the additonal income, I will likely be subsisting on ramen noodles and hot dogs for most of August.  The struggle and general discontentment will fuel my creativity, on the one hand, but, on the other hand, come on, economic stimulus check!

In other news, I have more major excitement coming up.  I have hired myself out as a dog sitter for my friend who’ll be out of the country for two weeks.  I’ll be taking care of her aging black lab and obnoxious chihuahua.  Actually, I love both of her dogs, so I’m looking forward to spending plenty of time lounging around her house, playing with the dogs, and watching her cable.  Uh, after my writing for the day is done, of course.  My own dog is a fan of her little chihuahua, but hates all dogs larger than he is, and is terrified of the labrador.  My goal for the time will be to make them into friends.  Let’s hope my dog doesn’t manage to piss off the normally docile labrador, because she could take off his head with one slobbery bite.  Gripping, isn’t it?

Ugh, my students still have 90 minutes left on the final, and I just know at least one of them will take all that time.  I should have brought a book.

So, anyway, are you doing anything exciting this summer?

Ever Reaching New Levels of Botheration

It’s the last week of classes, except for the inevitable crush of grading that will result after the final exam.  As usual, I can’t believe the summer class went by so quickly!  They always do, though.

I may be getting the chance to teach another class during the second summer session, but I won’t find out about that for a while. (Probably not until the day before the class starts, because they just like to take a long-ass time to do anything important here, such as notify people of their teaching loads and schedules.) It would be a great, great thing, financially, but it would also take away from the time I have slated for research and writing.  We will just have to see what happens!

You don’t care about any of that, though, do you?  I bet you came here to hear me bitch about the many nettlesome things going on in my life.  Well, Reader, I would never want to let you down.

Let’s just start with the fact that my car is having a(nother) weird electrical problem and the tail lights aren’t working, which led to me getting pulled over and getting a ticket.  The ticket wasn’t for the tail lights, oh no, but for not having my insurance card.  I can get it voided, though, by bringing my insurance info down to the courthouse, which I tried to do yesterday.  Because this is New Wye, Land of All That Is Completely Ass-Backwards, the ticket was not yet “in the system,” so I couldn’t do anything about it.  No doubt it will be weeks before I can.

You know what else is “not in the system”?  My New Wye state tax return, for which I am entitled a refund.  Apparently there is a long-ass “processing time,” which I can bet would be significantly shorter if I were required to make them a payment instead of the opposite.  No, you cannot file online in this state, believe me, I tried.

Currently, I am waiting for my mechanic to call me about my car — but I don’t know if he will even be calling today or if I may have to wait until tomorrow, or indefinitely.  Judging by the way things tend to unfold in New Wye, it could be months.  It’s no use asking, since the particular brand of English spoken by said mechanic is near unintelligible to me.

I will not even get into my ongoing feuds with both UPS and the people who write the clothing descriptions on oldnavy.com, except to say that, apparently, 10:00 is “between 10:30-2:00″ and “hemline hits above knee” can be translated as “hemline hits eight inches below knee.”  It’s hot here, man.  My knees just want to be FREE.

I hope you are having a better week, dudes.

Summer Reading: Not Really the Saddest Thing

Starting tomorrow, I’ll have no cable TV or internet at home.  This is the saddest thing.

Because my summer budget is extremely tight, and because I have decided that rent, electricity, and phone (not to mention wine and cigarettes and, oh yeah, food) are more important than TV and internet, though only by the narrowest of margins, I have had to cancel my service with Unnamed Cable Company.  At least for the next three months, I won’t be paying them over $100 per month to provide me with TV, a spotty internet connection, and terrible customer service.  Hooray?

I have, in the past, been able to somewhat reliably use my neighbors’ wifi when mine wasn’t working, but the people with the strong, unsecured connection seem to have moved out of the building.  I can still connect to a couple of other signals intermittently, but not without getting dropped or disconnected every two minutes.  This means that my formerly grand plan of keeping caught up with my shows via online streaming video will probably not come to fruition.  Which in turn means…it means…oh, I just can’t face it!

It means, I suppose, that I will just not be watching much television this summer.  Normally, in my lazy and indolent summers of unemployment, I spend my time alternating between stressing about money and lounging on the couch, no pants on, watching the tube.  Whatever shall I do now?  And will it have to involve pants?

I do have this class to teach through the end of this month, so there’s something to keep me busy, you may be thinking.  I also have a few papers I am working on, which should occupy me for the following month or so.  These things, however, do not count.  They are daytime, office-type activities, not evening, relaxing-type activities.  I suppose I may have to actually devote my evening relaxation time to — gasp! — reading, of all wretched things.  Quelle horreur.

I have some business reading I need to do for various projects and papers (a little Faulkner, a little Nabokov, a little Raymond Chandler and maybe some Alain Robbe-Grillet), but, again, these are office reading and I’d also like to do some pleasure reading.  I’m perfectly able to figure out what sort of reading I need to be doing professionally, as that is my job, after all.  With my fun reading, though, I am feeling a bit lost and could go in a billion different directions.  Here’s a list of some things I am either in the middle of or am planning to read this summer:

1. Dave Eggers - What is the What (currently reading)

2. Jon Krakauer - Into the Wild (currently reading)

3. David Foster Wallace - Infinite Jest

4. Cormac McCarthy - No Country for Old Men

5. Gustave Flaubert - Madame Bovary

What should I add to that?  What’s your favorite book you’ve read lately?  Tell me all about it, and I’ll put it on the list.

Summer reading is not really the saddest thing, I suppose.  The saddest thing, if you are sure you’re ready, is either this, this, or this.