Nibbler
Being brains, they feel compelled to know everythi
- Local time
- Yesterday 11:23 PM
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2011
- Messages
- 190
I'm back in school pursuing a degree in biology.
Our large lecture class is divided with a center aisle bisecting the room. On the left are 8 or 9 rows of conference style tables and chairs. On the right are 8 or 9 rows of tables and chairs.
The professor handed the left side of the room, first row, a sign-in sheet to let go through the class during the lecture. The idea is to send it all the way through the left side of the room to the back, and have it circle back up on the right side of the room. That way, everyone sees the sign in sheet, job done.
However!
The sheet made it back 4 rows (half way back) where the guy sitting on an aisle seat handed it across the aisle to the other side of the room. And he did this even though behind him were still like 4 more rows of people who hadn't signed it yet.
I sat there in amazement at how he could do such a nonsensical thing. Do one side of the room first, and it will make its way back up to the front on the right. How easy is that? Now the whole system is messed up and we have a mismatch of rows--half the large class--who'll never see the sign in sheet because it won't return that way now.
I sat there thinking about it while also trying to pay attention to the lecture. But the back of the left side and front of the right side of the room got all messed up. That's half the class of data collection that guy screwed up. And it never circled its way back up to those who got cut off.
When lecture was over, the professor said to make sure to sign in. Everyone was like, "Where did it go?!"
Ugh. I paid way too much attention to that damn sign in sheet that day.
By the way, I was lucky enough to see it when it got to me on the right. I was far enough back.
Our large lecture class is divided with a center aisle bisecting the room. On the left are 8 or 9 rows of conference style tables and chairs. On the right are 8 or 9 rows of tables and chairs.
The professor handed the left side of the room, first row, a sign-in sheet to let go through the class during the lecture. The idea is to send it all the way through the left side of the room to the back, and have it circle back up on the right side of the room. That way, everyone sees the sign in sheet, job done.
However!
The sheet made it back 4 rows (half way back) where the guy sitting on an aisle seat handed it across the aisle to the other side of the room. And he did this even though behind him were still like 4 more rows of people who hadn't signed it yet.
I sat there in amazement at how he could do such a nonsensical thing. Do one side of the room first, and it will make its way back up to the front on the right. How easy is that? Now the whole system is messed up and we have a mismatch of rows--half the large class--who'll never see the sign in sheet because it won't return that way now.
I sat there thinking about it while also trying to pay attention to the lecture. But the back of the left side and front of the right side of the room got all messed up. That's half the class of data collection that guy screwed up. And it never circled its way back up to those who got cut off.
When lecture was over, the professor said to make sure to sign in. Everyone was like, "Where did it go?!"
Ugh. I paid way too much attention to that damn sign in sheet that day.
By the way, I was lucky enough to see it when it got to me on the right. I was far enough back.
