Apparently one of the classrooms I'm teaching in next semester doesn't exist. I went to look for it today, since I'd never been in the building before, and I did not find the number I'm assigned to. I did find [number]A, though. It was written in pencil. On a PostIt note stuck to the door.
This does not fill me with confidence.
If this is in fact my classroom, it means I'm going to be teaching in the ROTC area. Which is in an athletics center. Where I will be teaching English.
...I don't even know. This campus has baffled me since I got here. At least my other class is in the humanities building.
This does not fill me with confidence.
If this is in fact my classroom, it means I'm going to be teaching in the ROTC area. Which is in an athletics center. Where I will be teaching English.
...I don't even know. This campus has baffled me since I got here. At least my other class is in the humanities building.
no subject
Date: 2009-07-11 05:55 am (UTC)Niiice. I'm hoping the secretaries in my department will know what's up, because my other option is to knock on one of the athletics office doors near the room and see if anyone has a clue.
I can honestly say that being in a bizarre location can be a bonding point for you & the students
I'm all for that. (And not only is the location bizarre, but the building is one of those you just know is going to have issues with heating in the winter, and weird smells when it rains, and odd noises at random times.)
provided you don't have 150 of them, of course.
I would die if I had to grade 150 papers. No, I just have 22 in each section, which is relatively manageable. (Although I have to do individual conferences twice a year. It's gonna suck. At least I get to cancel two class sessions of each section for each set of conferences!)
no subject
Date: 2009-07-13 09:55 pm (UTC)Rather like my high school's freshman building. Very old. Slightly smelly. With bats in the curtains and several janitor's that looked like they wanted to steal half your brain...
Which may have been true, considering the building was in fact called "Brainerd"
no subject
Date: 2009-07-13 10:59 pm (UTC)We just had clanging water pipes in the basement classrooms and ancient steam radiators in all rooms that tended to spit boiling water at people sitting too close. Considering the building was more than 100 years old, that's pretty good, actually.
Mmmmm, braaaaaains. Zombie janitors FTW!
no subject
Date: 2009-08-19 05:38 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-19 05:13 pm (UTC)I'm trying to think of a reason for that, and I can't. Was the floor rotten in the middle or something? (At my HS, we kept the desks away from the perimeter, because the radiators tended to spurt boiling water out of their steam valves. Not a good place to be sitting in winter! We also had the creaky wooden floors that I think were actually made of more varnish than wood--whee, giant fire hazards! Yeah, that building dated from the 1880s, can you tell?)
It even had the "Men's" stairs at one end that were normal height and the "Women's" entrance on the other end with really low stairs.
Huh. I had never heard of this concept before, but that sounds kind of nifty.
no subject
Date: 2009-09-10 03:51 am (UTC)I'm trying to think of a reason for that, and I can't. Was the floor rotten in the middle or something?
Ding ding ding... When you can stand in the doorway and see that the floor kind of has a concave look to it, you take a chair as close to the wall as possible.
It even had the "Men's" stairs at one end that were normal height and the "Women's" entrance on the other end with really low stairs.
Huh. I had never heard of this concept before, but that sounds kind of nifty.
It was, really - until you had to go up three flights of the "Women's" stairs and your muscles reminded you that you were used to normal-sized steps. Of course, the Men's were extra steep. Thankfully there *were* some normal ones in the middle!
It was really a cool building. It's pretty spiffy now that it's been totally redone, but I miss the charm of the ancient one.
no subject
Date: 2009-09-10 04:36 pm (UTC)Oh, dear. Well, I can see how you would want to do that. (I'm facing that a bit with the landing on the back stairway to my apartment. I try to walk close to the wall, and not the balustrade, when going from my door to the steps.)
It was, really - until you had to go up three flights of the "Women's" stairs and your muscles reminded you that you were used to normal-sized steps. Of course, the Men's were extra steep. Thankfully there *were* some normal ones in the middle!
And this is where elevators come in handy. ;)