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smh, dont ask, give her what you haveOriginally Posted by ChiefWiggum
is it even worth it? I shot her an email saying.."is my itinerary info good enough?
smh, dont ask, give her what you haveOriginally Posted by ChiefWiggum
is it even worth it? I shot her an email saying.."is my itinerary info good enough?
Originally Posted by kix4kix
Given the circumstance prof is a %%!%% for even asking for proof.Originally Posted by Nawth21
For all of you saying he does not need to submit proof - this isn't necessarily true. Here a professor may ask for proof especially if points are awarded for attendance (many of our classes have miss x days you drop a letter grade). She is well within her rights to verify that the student had a legitimate reason to miss lecture. If he can't provide that, tough *@@@. Hell most syllabi will even state that if you do not want to be penalized for missing a lecture, you need to have documentation to back up the absence.
In college I told a professor the same thing only it was more of a stretch than a blatant lie. I told him a family member died, when in actuality it was a family friend. The prof emailed me back one of the classiest responses I have ever received, even offered to ask if I needed anything. Always looked up to him after that. The last thing on their mind should be suspecting foul play. Although, the logical conclusion is that a student from a prior year messed that excuse up for you
Originally Posted by kix4kix
Given the circumstance prof is a %%!%% for even asking for proof.Originally Posted by Nawth21
For all of you saying he does not need to submit proof - this isn't necessarily true. Here a professor may ask for proof especially if points are awarded for attendance (many of our classes have miss x days you drop a letter grade). She is well within her rights to verify that the student had a legitimate reason to miss lecture. If he can't provide that, tough *@@@. Hell most syllabi will even state that if you do not want to be penalized for missing a lecture, you need to have documentation to back up the absence.
In college I told a professor the same thing only it was more of a stretch than a blatant lie. I told him a family member died, when in actuality it was a family friend. The prof emailed me back one of the classiest responses I have ever received, even offered to ask if I needed anything. Always looked up to him after that. The last thing on their mind should be suspecting foul play. Although, the logical conclusion is that a student from a prior year messed that excuse up for you