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How To Deal With: ‘Bad’ Teachers

This article is written by a student writer from the Her Campus at USC (AU) chapter.

I’m sure you’ve all at some point in our university careers, dealt with a bad teacher or two. It can make our time at university a little (or a lot) more stressful. Teachers are here because they want to be and enjoy seeing the growth academically and socially from students. So why are some always so agitated and bossy? As a paying student who chooses to have a tertiary education, you have the right to voice your frustration at the lack of respect. I can’t tell you why some teachers come to university with a bad attitude nor do I wish to delve further into their personal lives. But I can tell you that you have a voice, so use it!

Here are some tips on dealing with bad teachers:

1:  If you can, change classes, ASAP! It will help your learning experience and make the class more enjoyable instead of dreading it each week.


2. Speak to other classmates. If other students are saying the same thing, you may have a case to present to the head faculty. (Safer in numbers right?)


3. If a teacher is threatening to not pass you and you know you are in the right, SPEAK UP! Go and speak to someone higher than him or her or if (god forbid) they are the highest, go and speak to another teacher and get a second opinion. No one should fail a class because the teacher has a personal vendetta against them.


4. Fill out those ANNOYING surveys that constantly flood our emails. It’s the perfect chance to speak up, voice your opinion honestly and still remain anonymous. Not only will this notice the faculty of teacher’s behavior, it will notify the teacher and later on prevent future students from enduring what you did. 

5. Lastly, suck it up (in the nicest way). If you generally just don’t like the teacher or don’t see eye-to-eye, just zip your lips and do you work. The teacher will have no cause to fail you (unless you obviously don’t do the work) and you can finish the semester and down a well-deserved beer (or 10). 

Don’t ever be afraid to voice your opinion. You have the right and deserve the right to an education that you choose. 

Goodluck! 

Jasmin Maastricht is a third year Journalism student at USC, the Founder and Editor-in-Chief of the Her Campus chapter at USC, as well as being one of the 2013 USC Student Mentor's, freelancing for online publication WeekendNotes and interning for Australia's number one online fashion store, Fashionfile. Her passion is Journalism but besides that, Jasmin has always had a strong interest in fashion and entertainment, completing six weeks of work experience with Noosa 101.3fm Community Radio Station and has had the amazing opportunity of working with Australia's number one teenage lifestyle magazines, DOLLY in April 2011 and again in April 2013 and Girlfriend in February, 2013. She has also scored herself internships with the Sunshine Coast's local newspaper, the Sunshine Coast Daily and with Caboolture News. She has been working with both papers eight months now. She has previously worked with Darby Radcliff with the Her Campus Ole Miss chapter while on exchange in Mississippi as well as working with the M s Observer magazine and has never looked back. Email Jasmin at jasminmaastricht@hercampus.com for any questions or getting involved at Her Campus USC or contact her via social media. HCXO!