Oh god, I had a teacher exactly like this. I think he broke the sound barrier.genericusername64 said:I had a teacher who couldn't slow. the. fuck. down. It was like he did cocaine with his morning cofee
Oh god, I had a teacher exactly like this. I think he broke the sound barrier.genericusername64 said:I had a teacher who couldn't slow. the. fuck. down. It was like he did cocaine with his morning cofee
I can forgive the fact that not all lawyers or doctors know history. It's not part of their job to know it. I know very little history myself, but not knowing that Nelson Mandela is alive... I've never heard about Nelson's Column however. I guess knowing about monuments in England has never been relevant so far in my education...Mad1Cow said:I couldn't take my cousin seriously after she was getting confused about Nelson's column.
"Oh, whosit, that Nelson Mandela column."
"...what?"
"Ya'know, Nelson's column, named after Nelson Mandela because he's dead."
"Dear, Nelson's column is in honour of Admiral Nelson."
"Nooo, it's Nelson Mandela, I can remember because of the funny hat!"
"That's the Admiral's hat and Nelson Mandela isn't even dead!"
"...naaaah, you're having me on there!"
She's a lawyer by the way.
Thank you for saying this, it actually made me laugh quite a bit. great start on my day, thanks a lot.AstylahAthrys said:My bio teacher last semester. He thought the world was flat, but it just appeared round because it was spinning so fast.
Needless to say I couldn't take him seriously ever again.
Ha, I like this one XDquestionnairebot said:I was in Foods class and made a Red Cake with a Yellow Hammer and Sickle on it. The teacher pulled me aside and asked me if it was a "Nazi symbol". At that moment I knew she could no longer teach me.
Oh. Oh man. You just won the internets. Thank you. Thank you. You just made my day.questionnairebot said:I was in Foods class and made a Red Cake with a Yellow Hammer and Sickle on it. The teacher pulled me aside and asked me if it was a "Nazi symbol". At that moment I knew she could no longer teach me.
I think just about everyone would have at some point experienced this. If you want my advice, chances are if you find this annoying, then you are probably one of the better students. If that is the case then just bludge through his classes and teach yourself. I do this a lot and most of my teachers hate me but I get good grades so I don't really give a shit about them lol.brandon237 said:The title is relating to a teacher of mine, a science teacher. A new teacher who has not been the most knowledgeable science teacher I have ever had. During the first lesson he taught us, the lesson was on magnetism, he said that the cause of the auroras was "The magnetic field of the Earth bending the light[footnote]Yes, photons of light...[/footnote] towards the poles." For those who are not science students, think about the fact that it takes a black hole many times heavier than our sun to bend light like that. Couple this statement with his general level of confusion and number of self-contradictions and corrections, as well as his Arnold Schwarzenegger accent and I simply cannot take him seriously when he teaches.
Now to the point: Have any of you Escapees ever had a situation like this where, for some or other reason, you could no longer take some seriously? All the better if said person was a teacher / in a position of power over you.
Oh, and if anyone says they cannot take me seriously for the slight grammatical error in the title, I will kindly ask them to consume their own pancreas. It is there for effect damnit!
On the contrary, a teacher can't know everything. A teacher who PRETENDS he knows everything when he doesn't is more of a problem than a teacher who knows to admit when he's wrong. Otherwise you can't take his word, he might just be making shit up.Jean Hag said:My mother. She calls me SON OF A *****. Needless to say i had to expose the irony of that.
And my phisics teacher that didn't know that super-massive black holes are in the center of all (or almost) all galaxies. A teacher not knowing what a student knows isn't a teacher.
History minor, social science ed major here. The first three things on your list were accepted history at one point; it's only recently that historians have gone back and re-examined the accepted "facts." If this teacher is older, it may be what he was taught, and even if not, it could very well be the curriculum that he's supposed to teach -- state mandated curricula are very rarely up to date. The one about the civil war is true -- but only when talking about Americans. Basically, more Americans were killed in the Civil War than in World War II. I've got no response for 5 or six, though.the spud said:My history teacher is a complete dumbass. Let me give you a list of some the things he has taught us:
Christopher Columbus was the first to find America because everyone else thought the earth was flat
Marco Polo was a great adventurer who explored China (he probably didn't)
Thomas Edison invented the light bulb (in reality he just stole the idea from someone else)
The civil war was the bloodiest war (that was actually WW2)
If you are a soscialist, you go against everything America stands for
"Obamacare" is completely unconstitutional
And finally, he decided he could just skip a section if he just showed us Forrest Gump.
Edit:
Hahahaha, that's funny. I would have had to walk out of the room to catch my breath if that happened.Gincairn said:From a couple of women at work
Points to the television showing a picture of George W Bush
Girl 1: "Who's that?"
Girl 2: "I think he's the king of America or summink"
Picture changes to Tony Blair
Girl 2: "Not sure who he is though"
Girl 1: "He's the prime minister of America"
I shit you not that conversation actually happened.
It left me finding it difficult to take anyone I work with seriously.
Some might find that to be a good thing.TheDarkEricDraven said:My 9th grade English teacher. Gods. I don't think I can tell you just how much she has no clue what she was doing. She walked us in on the cheerleaders changing...twice...and she is the cheerleading coach!
It started in 1939 after Germany invaded Poland (so the first time she was wrong about the date). My mates were absolutely pissed when the conquest of their country was passed over as insignificant (which I think is a little unfair at the very least considering the invasion was what triggered the declaration of war by the French, British and Commonwealth nations, and was used to secure a temporary alliance with the USSR).Plazmatic said:wait wasn't it 1938 or 39?deadman91 said:I had a teacher who on one day said that World War 2 started in 1938, then on another day (after reading the text book or something) said that the war only technically started when Germany invaded France.
My Polish mates were fuming.
EDIT :yeah it was 1939, what are you talking about
Now that is some epic level failing. Sadly it is not that uncommon for people to mix up the two. Even though they were the complete opposite and committed historic levels of genocide against each other.questionnairebot said:I was in Foods class and made a Red Cake with a Yellow Hammer and Sickle on it. The teacher pulled me aside and asked me if it was a "Nazi symbol". At that moment I knew she could no longer teach me.