- Rate Your Students
Rate Your Students is a
weblog started in November 2005 by a "tenured humanities professor from the South." The site is now run by a group of professors, all anonymous.In an article from the "
Arizona State Web Devil", one of many that appeared on the site, the original moderator said that the impulse to start the blog was, "to poke fun atRateMyProfessors.com , a mostly unmonitored and disingenuous site that traffics mostly in character assassination. Often I've heard people raise the notion of, 'What if there was a Rate My Students? Wouldn't people be horrified to find out how awful some students can be?' And I thought I'd do it as a lark. I suspected it'd be fun for a couple of weeks and then I'd ditch it. But the response was great, and very quickly the e-mail I was getting was about other things: how to make classrooms work better, what students need to succeed, what professors need to know about the modern student. So my goal became to offer a public forum where interested parties can talk about these things."The site received much national press in early 2006, The
Chronicle of Higher Education and Inside Higher Ed. both weighed in: "For some professors who have had to cringe at scathing personal attacks posted by students onRateMyProfessors.com , a new blog — Rate Your Students — is providing a bit of catharsis."But many college newspapers were alarmed and dismissive who?. In the "
Cavalier Daily ", the weekly student newspaper at theUniversity of Virginia , one editor wrote: "Rate Your Students [http://rateyourstudents.blogspot.com/] exists for no serious reason. After perusing the site for 20 minutes or so, I was shocked and disappointed with the immature content I found. These professors are substituting mockery for the constructive communication that should be taking place. Rather than create an elitist Web site where students are depicted as rude,iPod -sporting somnambulists, professors should advocate a better response to students' desire for information about their future professors -- a desire that stems more from insecurity than apathy." [cite news |url=http://www.cavalierdaily.com/CVArticle_print.asp?ID=25631&pid1386 |title=Ranting, Not Rating |first=Sina |last=Kian |work=Cavalier Daily |date=2006-12-05 |archiveurl=http://74.125.45.104/search?q=cache:tv-jdnsJLRQJ:www.cavalierdaily.com/CVArticle.asp%3FID%3D25631%26pid%3D1386+ranting+not+rating+site:cavalierdaily.com&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us&client=firefox-a |archivedate=2008-01-31]External links
* [http://rateyourstudents.blogspot.com/ Rate Your Students]
* [http://www.thecrimson.com/article.aspx?ref=510997 Professors Even the Score - from "Harvard Crimson"]
* [http://www.dailyfreepress.com/media/paper87/news/2006/01/30/News/Teacher.Blog.Rates.Students-1521040.shtml?page=1 Teacher Blog Rates Students - from "The Daily Free Press" (Boston)]
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* [http://www.newsobserver.com/674/story/391641.html Prof's Ills Find Home in Blog - from "News Observer" (Raleigh)]
* [http://www.collegian.psu.edu/archive/2006/01/01-20-06tdc/01-20-06dnews-06.asp Professor's Site Mocks Rate My Professors - from Penn State "Daily Collegian"]
* [http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2006/01/16/rate Rate Your Students - from "Inside Higher Ed"]
* [http://www.villagevoice.com/arts/0602,lagorio,71678,12.html Hot for Teacher - from "Village Voice"]
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9507E2DB1F30F930A15757C0A9609C8B63&n=Top%2fReference%2fTimes%20Topics%2fSubjects%2fT%2fTeachers%20and%20School%20Employees Turning the Table on Students - from "New York Times"]References
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