• RyanGosling [none/use name]
    ·
    edit-2
    9 months ago

    Lol many of the professors with dog shit reviews both from RMP and in-house student reviews are still teaching at my school for like decades now. If they didn’t fire professors back in the day for being boring or talking a lot or being useless, I can’t imagine them doing it now due to RMP

    It would be more worrying if this was “RateMyTeacher” because you’ll get a lot of “why don’t they teach us taxes?!” type students complaining and deranged parents complaining about rainbows and litter boxes. Teachers are usually not afforded the luxury of institutional protection.

    I suppose one could abuse it with review bombing. I’ve never used it before so I don’t know how robust their authentication checks are. But other than that, it’s no different than having a bunch of kids complain during end of the semester surveys or spreading word of mouth. It’s just that with RMP, I can avoid wasting my time 80% of the time.

      • Philosoraptor [he/him, comrade/them]
        ·
        9 months ago

        Ehh, it's a double-edged sword. It's good that dumbfucks can't cause problems for genuinely good professors by review bombing them, but it also means that truly terrible teachers are horrifically common at a lot of institutions. Lots of university professors see teaching as an annoying chore they have to do so they can get back to their real jobs, and since teaching reviews have no real impact on anything, they have no incentive to change. In general, the more elite the institution is, the fewer good teachers you'll encounter there, which is a shame.

    • mar_k [he/him]
      ·
      9 months ago

      Oh I absolutely used ratemyteacher in middle school and high school, I think it got shut down a couple years ago or something. It was pretty much exclusively a student echochamber, all my strict teachers had like 1 star and the chill ones 4 or 5