gardenstatebear said:Speaking as a retired prof, this sounds like "I thought I was taking a mick, and she kicked my ass."movielover said:
San Jose Mercury: Aaron Rodgers slams Cal teacher who almost got him expelled
"Imagine the history of American professional football if, as Aaron Rodgers says, a professor at UC Berkeley had succeeded in getting him expelled after she told him he would never make it in the NFL or amount to anything.
"In a conversation this weekend with podcaster Joe Rogan, the reigning NFL's Most Valuable Player said his college career was at risk, which probably would have meant he wouldn't have been able to impress scouts for the 2005 NFL Draft...."
""She ripped me apart," the Green Bay Packers quarterback said about a meeting he said he had with the teacher during office hours. He said she told him, "You are an entitled athlete. You expect things to be given to you. What are are you going to with your life?"
"When Rodgers said he told her, "I'm going to play in the NFL," she replied, "No way in hell." ..."
"...Speaking more about the Cal teacher who tried to get him expelled, Rodgers said he and more than a dozen other members of the Cal Golden Bears football team were enrolled in a class that sounds like an easy academic class designed for students to fulfill a basic requirement."
https://www.mercurynews.com/2022/08/29/aaron-rodgers-slams-cal-teacher-who-almost-got-him-expelled
Spring 2018 I took a fantastic course taught by Nobel Laureate Astrophysicist Saul Perlmutter, philosophy prof John Cambell and psychology prof Tonia Lombrozo. Absolutely fantastic course. One day a week the class would be a half hour shorter because they would hold office hours. Incredibly cool to be able to hang with Saul for 1/2 hour a week and just listen and he was so amazing about engaging with people. I was always dumfounded more students didn't show-up, I mean this is why you go to Berkeley! My biggest accomplishment of that course was discovering how I could get from my class in Barrows Hall to the Goldman School on Hearst and LeRoy without having to backtrack up and down a hill, and only using 12 stair steps... but I digress...
For the most part the GSIs were OK, but a couple were completely full of themselves. If we were unhappy with a particular grade, we were able to challenge it. We had to do these weekly papers... I actually liked them and thought they were fun (plus they were a big part of our grade, which was preferable to me over tests...). I challenged a couple and on one in particular, the GSI was clearly showing a political bias. I challenged very straight forwardly with a memo style correspondence going over the points.
The GSI replied to me that I would be better served showing more deference and respect. F that. My challenge was completely professional and without passion. But now I was PO'd. I showed the exchange to a couple of other professors of mine and they both compelled me to mention something to Saul. So I did, and I'm glad I did. Because most undergrads would just have to take this because they'd be afraid of how escalating something like this could play out. This undergrad didn't have to worry about it. So, while not knowing all the details, I can easily see Aaron's POV. And we all tend to embellish as we get more distance from an event.
Just for fun, I loved this tradition at Cal on the last day of classes...
One of the great traditions at @UCBerkeley is on the last day of lecture, students thanking their profs with applause! In this case @NobelPrize Laureate Saul Perlmutter thanks the awesome 👏 @TaniaLombrozo as she teaches her last class at @Cal! Talk about #WednesdayWisdom! pic.twitter.com/KkSjbkhTt3
— Ken Montgomery (@MontgomeryKen) April 25, 2018