RaikuFA said:
Belated said:
Michael Fahey said:
I am a college student, and I have a teacher who is hard core against cell phones in the class. (that and she just acts like all the students are children) When ever someone's phone goes off in their back pack, she writes their name down and when the next test comes around she subtracts points from them.
The other day my phone was on vibrate so she couldn't hear it, but it just kept going off so I took it out to shut it off. She caught me and asked what I was hiding, and told me to show the class. I put up no resistance and gave her no trouble, I just said "my phone was going off so I was shutting it off" and showed that it was indeed my phone. She then pointed to the door and said "good bye" I was baffled and asked "Are you really kicking me out?" and she angrily said "Yes, I have a zero tolerance on phones" once again I didn't fight this and just left. She also marked it as if I was absent for that day of class
I am just curious, are teachers actually allowed to do that? To subtract points from tests and kick students out and mark it against their attendance? I have the class tomorrow, I am not sure if she is gonna do anything else when I get there.
Dude, where's your sense of entitlement? Get entitled! I'm assuming you're paying to attend college, yes? You might be paying with student loans, which means taking up debt, and debt is one Hell of a burden to bear. You are a paying customer, and as such, you are entitled to the decent service that you are paying for. Denying you the classes you're paying to attend is NOT decent service by any standards. What right does she have to throw you out when you're contributing to her paycheck!? Hell, she should be licking your boots! Go complain to the school board or something. Get mad, man! Get mad that you aren't getting your money's worth.
they arent entitled to shit. shes paid, she can refuse to educate at all
Your post makes no sense whatsoever. In fact, it makes so little sense, that it actually makes a negative value of sense. You are now in sense-debt.
If you pay for a service, are you not entitled to receive that service? If you pay for gasoline, you are entitled to the gasoline you paid for. If you go to a restaurant and order chicken, you are entitled to chicken. If you pay for movie tickets, you are entitled to go watch that movie. If you buy a video game console, you are entitled to play with that console. This is a very simple concept. I can't believe you don't get it.
He paid to be educated by her. Therefore, he is entitled to be educated by her. And if she refuses to educate, she is not upholding her end of the implied contract that his payment entails. Therefore, in the scenario you describe, he'd be entitled to his money back.