Ahh, Tuesday...
Tuesday, October 10th, 2006 04:50 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Tell me, are you attracted to Tuesdays?
How do you feel about the period between 2-4pm?
Is that a particularly... desirable part of the week?
Tue
2 - 4pm Medieval Lyrics
2 - 4pm The Notion of Taboo in German Literature
2 - 4pm Advanced Language Teaching: Subject Matter Teaching in a Foreign Language.
Well, it certainly is really the official proof that German students AND German uni staff is too lazy. Tuesdays are the first day of the week for the uni, for some reason, and especially in the depths of the Humanities there are few Professors who offer courses earlier than 2pm on Tuesdays, and since everybody only offers courses during the inofficial academic week (aka Tue, 2pm - Thu, 18 pm), most seminars are at the same time.
I need a time turner.
Or someone else to do a seminar that focuses on international literature and has a less boring topic. I mean - the notion of taboo - yes, very interesting, only not if your background reading for the course focuses on Fraser, Freud, Wundt and their cronies. Shudder. Not AGAIN. I mean, I always wanted to read "The Golden Bough", but I also always wanted to do a course on Minne.
What's a girl to do...
How do you feel about the period between 2-4pm?
Is that a particularly... desirable part of the week?
Tue
2 - 4pm Medieval Lyrics
2 - 4pm The Notion of Taboo in German Literature
2 - 4pm Advanced Language Teaching: Subject Matter Teaching in a Foreign Language.
Well, it certainly is really the official proof that German students AND German uni staff is too lazy. Tuesdays are the first day of the week for the uni, for some reason, and especially in the depths of the Humanities there are few Professors who offer courses earlier than 2pm on Tuesdays, and since everybody only offers courses during the inofficial academic week (aka Tue, 2pm - Thu, 18 pm), most seminars are at the same time.
I need a time turner.
Or someone else to do a seminar that focuses on international literature and has a less boring topic. I mean - the notion of taboo - yes, very interesting, only not if your background reading for the course focuses on Fraser, Freud, Wundt and their cronies. Shudder. Not AGAIN. I mean, I always wanted to read "The Golden Bough", but I also always wanted to do a course on Minne.
What's a girl to do...