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Today, the Undergraduate Council launches a new service for students called the “teaching hotline.” Conceived as a supplement to end-of-the-semester CUE evaluations, this program will hopefully enable students to improve their classes as soon as pedagogical problems arise. While we are confident, especially in light of the recent report issued by the Task Force on Teaching and Career Development, that Harvard’s students, teaching fellows (TFs), and faculty members all share the goal of improving teaching, this service will undoubtedly catch disapproving eyes. We hope, however, that through...

Author: By Jared R. Pearlman, Ryan A. Petersen, and Matthew L. Sundquist | Title: Better Teaching, an E-Mail Away | 2/14/2007 | See Source »

...resolve some of the key difficulties confronting teaching at Harvard. In general, students simply do not feel comfortable speaking directly with their professors and TFs about classroom frustrations. No party benefits from this lack of communication. Students remain dissatisfied throughout the semester, while at its close, they impart scathing CUE reviews to both TFs and course heads who are often unaware of their flaws. But neither a student’s fear of insulting an educator nor their mere discomfort in approaching a brilliant professor should halt the improvement of teaching and learning at Harvard. The teaching hotline removes these...

Author: By Jared R. Pearlman, Ryan A. Petersen, and Matthew L. Sundquist | Title: Better Teaching, an E-Mail Away | 2/14/2007 | See Source »

...this could conceivably be of interest if the movie had the dash, the wit, the silky threat of the mature Hannibal Lecter. But he's missing, as is Anthony Hopkins. So Webber takes his cue for pacing and tone from the young Hannibal. Alas. As played by Gaspard Ulliel, he's just a gawky, monosyllabic adolescent. You get hints of Hannibal's empathy - his gift at mind- and heart-reading - and the briefest pass at his fascination with culinary matters. But this Hannibal is hardly even a rough sketch for the later Lecter. Indeed, he's virtually unrecognizable...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Ho-hum Hannibal | 2/10/2007 | See Source »

...depends on your ability to actually feed the world, and only 40% is based on your ability to feed yourself. 9) Contrary to your expectations, your class on dinosaurs does not include a unit on how to successfully escape from an island filled with dinosaurs. 10) Re-reading the CUE guide, you realize that your professor’s 4.9 rating was based on just two evaluations—those of Clifton G. Dawson Jr. ’07 and Jay R. Lundy, Jr. ’09, neither of whom ever took the class. 11) You realize your...

Author: By M. AIDAN Kelly, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: 15 WAYS TO TELL THAT YOU SIGNED UP FOR THE WRONG CLASS | 2/7/2007 | See Source »

...Josh Hartnett, played on his high school’s football team. If she likes them athletic, perhaps she’ll want to score with Harvard’s star running-back. Plus, you know he’s a reliable guy because he sent us that CUE Evaluation reminder. ScarJo Hook-Up odds: 8:1 Lena Chen ’09: Rumor has it that Scarlett was spotted kissing her female friend, designer Tara Subkoff. So would she be down to get with Harvard’s most infamous sex blogger (who is also an FM editor)? Probably...

Author: By Sachi A. Ezura, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: The Perfect Score(s) | 2/7/2007 | See Source »

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