01-18-2022, 02:12 PM
I was in class with Peck and Haydel.
Haydel will want you to join a weekly Zoom call, partner with other students, exchange personal emails and phone numbers so you can talk with them. It is not "required" but in her class, it really is because if you say you can't do it, she will tell you that you will be "hindered" and she will tell you to find a partner.
This can be a good or bad thing, depending on the student. She also wants your home number to call you, and she will call you according to her schedule. So on the one hand, if you need this level of support, you will get it. But some students may find it intrusive and unnecessary.
Dr. Peck has a huge ego. She marked one of my papers as failing to answer the question. I think she was in a hurry, because I answered it. I wrote back to her and bolded the sections of the paper where I obviously answered. Then she changed her story and said she wanted me to submit it as written in the first person. You know, "I think...." and so on. A first person paper isn't part of the curriculum, it's not in the rubrics, not in any part of the class description, but it would have saved her face for making the earlier mistake. Therefore, I don't see her as a mentor to be trusted and I would avoid her class in case you end up face-to-face with her ego.
Haydel will want you to join a weekly Zoom call, partner with other students, exchange personal emails and phone numbers so you can talk with them. It is not "required" but in her class, it really is because if you say you can't do it, she will tell you that you will be "hindered" and she will tell you to find a partner.
This can be a good or bad thing, depending on the student. She also wants your home number to call you, and she will call you according to her schedule. So on the one hand, if you need this level of support, you will get it. But some students may find it intrusive and unnecessary.
Dr. Peck has a huge ego. She marked one of my papers as failing to answer the question. I think she was in a hurry, because I answered it. I wrote back to her and bolded the sections of the paper where I obviously answered. Then she changed her story and said she wanted me to submit it as written in the first person. You know, "I think...." and so on. A first person paper isn't part of the curriculum, it's not in the rubrics, not in any part of the class description, but it would have saved her face for making the earlier mistake. Therefore, I don't see her as a mentor to be trusted and I would avoid her class in case you end up face-to-face with her ego.