Yesterday, a friend of mine posted the following article from The Guardian on Facebook:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/...-a-rotten-deal
My friend's response was one of incredulity. So too, I must admit, was mine.
The basic gist of the article is that English Lit students recieve a bum deal over university because they have pretty much the lowest level of contact hours with members of staff - in this particular example, the student says that she has to rely on sparknotes rather than limited tutorial discussion to prepare her for her exams.
Speaking as a university tutor, this rather irritated me: this silly twit seems to want to be spoon-fed the answers, instead of doing actual research and analysis. On the other hand, it is true that contact time is very limited; here at Durham, students at levels two and three have only four one-hour tutorials per year in each module - this means that I, as a tutor, have to decide on a very limited number of texts from all the ones on the module to cover in our limited time together.
So what do you all think? How much priority should be given to contact hours at university? Given how much they are paying these days, do students have a right to be 'taught' the answers?


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That says it all I'm sure.
