How many of your students actually read the course syllabus?

In summary, professors bury hidden gems in the syllabus in order to surprise students and make sure they read it.
  • #1
jtbell
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Is Anybody Reading the Syllabus? To Find Out, Some Professors Bury Hidden Gems (Chronicle of Higher Education)

I never used the Easter-egg trick myself, but if I had a nickel for every time I answered a question about something that was in the syllabus (e.g. "How much does this test count towards the final grade?") I could have retired years ago. :-p

 
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  • #2
My masters thesis had about 100 pages of technical proofs. I really doubted that any of the jury would go through these proofs. So I buried inside of one of the proofs the message "If you mention this on the thesis defense, you get a bottle of wine". To my great surprise, they all noticed the remark.
 
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  • #3
My SB thesis advisor did something similar in his dissertation. Nobody spotted it.
 
  • #4
micromass said:
To my great surprise, they all noticed the remark.
Good thing you didn't offer them Glenlivet. :cool:
 
  • #5
jtbell said:
Good thing you didn't offer them Glenlivet. :cool:
What's that?
 
  • #6
For my PhD thesis, I did something similar and I ordered the chapters not by natural numbers but by prime numbers. So there were chapters 2,3,5,7,etc. Only one noticed this.
 
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  • #7
Very few of my students read the syllabus. Which is unfortunate, because the syllabus is essentially a contractual agreement between teacher and student.
 
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  • #8
micromass said:
What's that?
A rather expensive Scotch whisky. A dealer's page that I turned up with a Google search offers bottles ranging from £40-£120 depending on the year.
 
  • #9
Wait, I don't understand. What is a syllabus? I always thought it was just a course notes, but apparently it's not...
 
  • #12
Yup!
 
  • #14
micromass said:
You're telling me that students don't take the time to read 3 pages of important information and deadlines?

Actually, it can be worse. One of my job duties is to coordinate the first-year labs (as well as teaching more advanced labs and sometimes teaching lecture courses). At the start of the semester, I email (as an attachement) each student in each lab section the times and dates of the eight labs. This takes a fraction of a page, eight lines of text, double-spaced. I often receive emails with questions like
"When do the labs start?"
"Do I have a lab this week?"
"When do the labs end?"

berkeman said:
BTW, is it common to spell out e-mail addresses in publications like those? It's to make it harder to mine personal e-mail addresses, I suppose.

It is not uncommon, especially when a document is publicly available on the internet. Often, instructors make document available through password protected sites, and then the straight email address might be used. I don't put my outlines on the web. If I have a large class, I send the syllabus out as an attachment to a class email; if I have a small class class (looks like I have a class of 2 this fall), I give the students hardcopies in the first or second lecture.

My university regulations include

to provide students with a written course outline during the first week of classes, with a copy to the Member's Program Chair and Dean; and for graduate courses, copy the Dean of Graduate Programs. The outline shall include at least the following information:

(i) the name, office address, office telephone number, and weekly office hours of the Faculty Member;

(ii) the subject matter to be explored in the course; and (iii) a list of all required assignments and examinations and the relative weight of assignments and examinations in the final assessment of student performance. A Faculty Member may consult with the class about office hours, subject matter of the course and assignments, examinations and their weighting, and provide the class, the Program Chair and Dean, copies of the course outline following this consultation;
 
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  • #15
In some of my courses, I have a syllabus quiz which has to be completed during the first week of classes. If students fail to take the quiz, I drop them. Even then, I still get questions that are answered on the syllabus. Some students have admitted to me that they know the answer to their question is on the syllabus, but they're just too lazy to look it up.
 
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  • #16
When I went to school, I always read the syllabus (if you mean the sheet the professor gives out the first day of class as to how you will be evaluated). In general, the information about what textbooks are used or recommended is redundant, because you were expected to buy or otherwise procure the texts before the first day of class).

I am not sure but I think the percentages allocated to finals, midterms and homework were tentative as expected for the first day of class. I do not think of it as a legal contract that was binding. I do not know of any administration that would challenge the professor that he did not grade in accordance with that (early) sheet. As far as I know, the only way I could be sure of getting a higher mark as the other guy/gal was to beat him on every test, and paper. Otherwise I could never be sure.

After I read your article, I thought how would I respond to the request for "sending ALF to the professor" by E-mail or otherwise.

I am sure I would ignore such a silly request. This would certainly not mean that I had not read this far. Isn't it likely the professor was interrupted while writing the "syllabus" and the request for ALF was not meant for the physics or math class but the film class or some other (s)he was teaching. I personally know of cases where a colleague was interrupted by a phone call and started typing parts of the telephone conversation in the middle his E-mail to his embarrassment.

Shouldn't the student to professor and professor to student email be limited to official communication and reserved towards messages for successful course completion and understanding, and less towards internet jokes, unrelated stories, etc.
 
  • #17
vela said:
In some of my courses, I have a syllabus quiz which has to be completed during the first week of classes. If students fail to take the quiz, I drop them. [...]

How do you 'drop students'?
 
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  • #18
Andy Resnick said:
How do you 'drop students'?
Here, we do it by notifying the registrar. The main reason it's done is when a student violates an instructor's absence policy, if there is one. We have a special form for that purpose. I don't remember anybody dropping a student for other reasons, but I expect it's possible, provided the syllabus clearly states the conditions for it.
 
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  • #19
Andy Resnick said:
How do you 'drop students'?
The students are no longer enrolled in the course, if that's what you're asking.

At first, I felt I was being mean, and a few times, I succumbed to a student's sob story and let him or her back into the course. But I don't recall a single instance where such a student completed the course. Now I don't feel bad about strictly enforcing the policy.
 
  • #20
I remember reading the syllabus primarily for a description of the topics covered. I thought the content of the courses was exciting. As far as a syllabus containing office hours (which were usually decided after the first day), or the textbook (usually you had to buy it before the first day). The allocation of percentages between the midterm, final, homework etc, was interesting but in the initial weeks you were unlikely to use this information in a meaningful way.
I cannot imagine a prosepective physics major saying, I'm not taking any physics the first year because the professor is using the final to determine 50% of the grade. I'll wait for next year when the professor might (?) count the final only 35%. For upper division classes, can any student gamble taking EM out of order, taking EM2 before EM1, or QM2 before QM 1, or taking stat mech before classical mech ,just because of some information in the syllabus? If this is the case, it would certainly explain a tendency for a BS degree to take > 4 years, as well as encouraging shopping around for desired teachers with desired grading criteria.

I think if I were a professor, I would rather have students interested in the topics, and not trying to "box the professor in", in the grading. I notice Shankar's class in mechanics in YouTube, the professor weighted the final not by a fixed percentage established in the beginning. Shankar suggested, if the student demonstrated competence in the final, he would downweight the midterms and exams leading up to the final (my words not his, refer to the youtube videos) . After all, he was more interested I what the student came away with at the end of the course.

Not all professors agree with this, but I certainly think professors should be given latitude in grading, over establishing a rigid equation of percentages the first day.
 
  • #21
mpresic said:
I think if I were a professor, I would rather have students interested in the topics, and not trying to "box the professor in", in the grading. I notice Shankar's class in mechanics in YouTube, the professor weighted the final not by a fixed percentage established in the beginning. Shankar suggested, if the student demonstrated competence in the final, he would downweight the midterms and exams leading up to the final (my words not his, refer to the youtube videos) . After all, he was more interested I what the student came away with at the end of the course.

Not all professors agree with this, but I certainly think professors should be given latitude in grading, over establishing a rigid equation of percentages the first day.
Many colleges in the U.S. have established rules that the professor has to provide basic information about the course, including grading procedures, office hours, and a lot of other mundane stuff within the first week or so of the term. Part of the reasoning is to reduce the liability of possible lawsuits from students over the misrepresentation of the course, and so on. We're a very litigious bunch here in the states, so it pays to CYA, or at least that's the thinking amongst college administrators.
 
  • #22
mpresic said:
Not all professors agree with this, but I certainly think professors should be given latitude in grading, over establishing a rigid equation of percentages the first day.
You can concoct whatever elaborate grading scheme you want, but you need to explain it to the students so they know what to expect and what's expected of them.
 
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  • #23
I also got tired of students asking the same mundane questions. But also I wanted to emphasize certain behaviors that were expected (no mobile device use during hazardous-activity Engineering labs, for example). I try to treat my Syllabus like a "contract" (and thank goodness for the "Instructor Prerogative" clause that gives me permission to deviate if needed).

I put in a good bit of detail about class topics, objectives, schedules, study assignments, behavior expectations, and grading policies "so that the students know the rules of the game" in advance. I wanted to put more rigor in my policies like no late assignments etc., because the constant negotiations with student's laziness was sucking up my available time & energy.

We use Blackboard as a LMS at my school, and I posted an online Syllabus Quiz worth a few points. Student's awareness of my class policies & expectations have improved a lot, and defused a lot of antagonistic & confrontational discussions. I'd recommend this strategy for everyone.
 
  • #24
jtbell said:
Here, we do it by notifying the registrar.

vela said:
The students are no longer enrolled in the course, if that's what you're asking.

Interesting. I don't think we can do that here- at least, I have never heard of an instance where an instructor dis-enrolled a student. If a student never shows up to class, I have three grading options: an 'F', an incomplete 'I', or an 'X' (which I think is unique to my institution). The difference between an 'I' and an 'X' is that 'I' means the student may only have missed a small amount of work and the student and instructor must explicitly agree to a completion date within 1 semester, while an 'X' is supposed to be used for the student who missed considerable amounts of school due to an emergency or other similar situation out of their control (deployment, for example).

There's days when I wish I could dis-enroll students...
 
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  • #25
Mark44 said:
Many colleges in the U.S. have established rules that the professor has to provide basic information about the course, including grading procedures, office hours, and a lot of other mundane stuff within the first week or so of the term. Part of the reasoning is to reduce the liability of possible lawsuits from students over the misrepresentation of the course, and so on. We're a very litigious bunch here in the states, so it pays to CYA, or at least that's the thinking amongst college administrators.

The UK's Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education will not look kindly on you if you do not comply with its http://www.qaa.ac.uk/assuring-standards-and-quality/the-quality-code, and by not having a syllabus approved by the degree-awarding body which at a minimum sets out the course content and assessment methods and criteria, or not following the one you have, you are not complying with Part B Chapter B6's second indicator of good practice and various of Part C's indicators of good practice.

Whether students bother to read it is a separate question, but the information (apart from detailed scheduling information) will have been in the prospectus which prospective students ought to have read, albeit possibly in less detail.
 
  • #26
Andy Resnick said:
Interesting. I don't think we can do that here.
I think it's because I teach at community colleges, which are funded by the state based on enrollment. We're required to drop students who don't show up the first day or who stop attending regularly during the first two weeks of the semester. The rosters at the end of the two weeks determine how much money the state gives to the schools.
 
  • #27
I read all of them before the first day of classes started on blackboard. I refer to the syllabus near every class throughout the semester. I have one that was 41 pages long this semester, which terrified me even further. I'm retaking Calculus I. I had to drop II a few semesters ago, I didn't believe I was getting the material well enough to be in there! He reviewed the entire thing on the first day and asked us to initial by each section and turn in more signed documents stating that we received the information. He actually printed it for us, which was nice! This course has near 60 graded pieces, so he also included checklists for us to use to keep up with grades (much appreciated), and also individual schedules/due dates for lectures, homework, in-class problem sets, quizzes, and exams. I don't consider the amount of work accompanying this course a problem as I normally would, because I very much need some forced assistance on the subject.

When I have 4 and 5 courses, being able to stay organized is important and knowing what is due within a certain time frame helps me prioritize what assignments or studying I should be doing, the syllabus helps with that. I have serious issues with procrastination and usually won't start studying for an exam until the day before, but my work is rarely ever late. My only real problem with the courses is that I loathe online homework assignments and being hand-fed information from e-books, I prefer lectures and being able to read the textbook, work problems and take notes by hand instead. I can easily get used textbooks cheap, but the online access codes range around $150 (not much less than a textbook + code package), many of mine have required one. The syllabus includes information about that too.

I don't see why other students would not read the syllabus, it seems essential in being able to pass the course. Everything that's needed to know is usually in it, I don't have to bother them with too many questions, if the answer is already in there.
 
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  • #28
I really do not think that if a student does not comply with a request to send a dinosaur or ALF, (s)he has not read the syllabus. If the instructor offered to give the student > 5% on their grade if they send the dinosaur, then see how many dinosaurs they get. Of course, I think the instructor might have some explaining to do regarding their grading policies. I do feel few students will take the time to send the dinosaurs if they see no educational purpose, or higher evaluation.

Many years ago, during a social gathering just before colloquium, a professor (course instructor) repeatedly lamented, that during tests, the proctors had to answer questions clarifying the problems in his exams. He was quite a pest about it, and instructed his proctors to reply, "read the problem carefully". One day, he asked a question regarding the force on two capacitor plates after a switch was closed. However he did not state in the exam problem that there was (supposed to be an) applied voltage to the plate. (This was not a course in quantum theory and Casimir forces were not covered). When students asked their proctors, the proctors replied "read the problem carefully". About 60% of the class wrote the force is zero, because there is no applied voltage, or charge on the plates. Some others assumed a voltage V, or charge Q, etc. The bottom line was the instructor had to give full credit to the problem. This is a case of being "hoist by your own petard".
 
  • #29
I cannot be sure my students did not read my one page syllabus, but it did contain, once, a request for an email to me saying if a student had read it, and after a week I had gotten either zero or one response as I recall. The syllabus also contained explicit lists of prerequisite topics to be understood well before taking the course, but subsequent experience revealed very few had such prior knowledge. it also contained an explicit formula for the final grade computation and rules for attendance, as well as the date and time of the final, which many students expressed ignorance of later. It also contained express language as to the level of performance required on tests, e.g. the need to reproduce certain proofs, very few of which were in fact reproduced later. Many students also complained as to what was asked even though it had been clearly stated. I suspect many did not read the syllabus, others did not take it seriously, and still others failed to grasp the meaning of the clearly enunciated terms. Perhaps others allowed themselves the luxury of thinking that the requirement to understand the prerequisites well was fulfilled by their having passed the prior course with a D, even though I gave as examples the need to be able to rattle off perfectly the definitions of certain terms and the statements of certain explicitly named theorems, which most could not do.

Indeed since these syllabi were such an ineffective teaching tool, I suspect the requirement upon me to provide them was more a legal device by the university administration hoping to stave off possible suits from students alleging ill treatment.

Now that I am old I wish I had another chance to teach my students how to learn, and the importance of doing what their professors suggest, rather than assuming that is their responsibility.
 
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  • #30
Slightly OT but how many people read license agreements when installing software?
 
  • #31
This conversation is uncomfortably close at times to suggesting that instructors are to blame for lazy students who do not even bother to read the most basic course materials.

I'm on the other side of the instructor equation now, mentoring a number of early college students navigating their way through their first few semesters. The syllabus is the essential feature of navigating each course, along with the instructor provided resources on course schedules, assignments, graded events, etc.

When I served as a classroom instructor, I handed out paper copies of the syllabus, spent 5-10 minutes highlighting the most essential features, and then moved on. Helping students grow up sometimes means letting them receive the consequences of negligence. Some years ago, some students got a rude awakening when they figured out near the end of the semester that my grading scale was A, B, C, F at 90%, 80%, and 70%, respectively. There was no D. This scale had been approved at a department meeting as long as it was "clearly communicated on the syllabus." It was mentioned briefly in class also, and all the graded events reflected it as they were returned.

At some point, higher authorities at the college objected and insisted I have Ds as a possible grade, so I added a D range of 68% to 70% to the syllabus.
 
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  • #32
houlahound said:
Slightly OT but how many people read license agreements when installing software?
That's not really comparable. You can generally use software without reading the EULA, but imagine going into a course where the instructor tells you absolutely nothing about what's expected of you. You don't know what you'll be graded on, when the tests are, when the homework is due, if the homework is due, etc. The syllabus lays these expectations out for the students.
 
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  • #33
I don't think some here know what a syllabus actually is.
 
  • #34
houlahound said:
I don't think some here know what a syllabus actually is.
Tell us then!
 
  • #35
I googled it to check. Seems course overview, assessment calendar, assessment policy, topic overview, curriculum, pedagogy statement... are all used interchangeably these days.

Before this thread I never heard of assessment dates being part of a syllabus.
 

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