Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Collecting tips

I've come across a few tips lately that have made sense and will help me make my job a better one. I don't want to lose them.

The 85% rule : I can prepare to  100% ready for a course in six hours or 85% ready for a class in two hours and the only person who will notice the difference is me.  I think I kind of figured this one out on my own. Truth be told, I'm not at 85% these days. Closer to 70% most of the time. But the students don't seem to notice and I'm surviving the year. I must remember this one once 100% becomes a remote possibility.

Taking evenings and (gasp!) weekends off makes you more productive when you do work. I know this one. I maintained it for the most part through my Ph.D. I saw and still see so many academics around me who are "always" working, but yet they're always working at 50% productivity. They've got articles trailing around on the weekend, they feel like they're always on the clock, but they spend so much time in the staff room chatting. We all NEED down time. I work hard during regular office hours and I take my weekends off -- with the occasional exception, but as a general rule. I must remember this. August - October was a three-month exception and I hit burnout. I deserve time off and I should not feel guilty for taking it.  Tenure? Who knows. Maybe I'll never get it. Whatever. I've got to live.

I worked hard to get where I am, and now I have the right to make some decisions that put me first. I don't like the old hierarchy thing. My students want to see me? I want to be there for them. I don't want to be that annoying professor that puts himself first. But, you know what? I've worked hard to get where I am. One of the perks of being where I am is the flexible schedule. I can work from home on Fridays. I will work from home on Fridays. If Student XYZ wants to meet with me on Friday, sorry, she can come during my office hours. I'm not on campus on Fridays.  This may seem like a no brainer, but I'm only just getting it. I have this instinct to give up what I want in order to satisfy my students. No. This job is hard. It's intense. There are a few perks. Working from home on Fridays is one of those perks. I'm taking it, because I'm the professor and I can. It makes my life a little better, makes me a little less stressed, and therefore makes me a slightly better professor.

That's all for now, but there will be more. I want to keep track of these things I stumble across.

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