Early Course Feedback

Some gems from my early course feedback. We’ll start with the ugly.

Like most classes that require Matlab, the coding is always much more advanced than students are capable of. The math department does not realize the talk amongst the students is how just about all of us don’t know how to use Matlab. Students generally just copy and paste from google searches to get their assignments done and rename functions and variables to look different. When errors still remain, students just have the Matlab TA’s fix the errors for them. Matlab assignments account for most of the hours spent for this class as well as all other courses that require Matlab

I’ve seen too many students grow and learn the Matlab to believe this is true of everyone. I’ve also had students thank me later when they were looking for jobs and discovered employers want them to know Matlab. There are probably one or two using this tactic to get by. I think this student is going to hate my class or drop it; I don’t think you can get away with this in my class for the entire semester.

The teacher cares about teaching a lot but is a little intimidating and scary. She is almost like a mom in that she cares a lot and while I’m sure she is happy she always seems pissed off. My mom is scary when she is pissed off. Dr. (Jinx) expects only the best work, which is good, but at the same time she seems to favor the top students in the class. She is very involved though! She is always willing to help and is willing to give us life/career tips. She genuinely wants you to learn and puts effort into her teaching. Because of this class, I am learning LaTeX and Matlab and I can put the end of semester project on my resume.

At least there’s some good and some bad. I am not happy to hear that I always seem pissed off. Yikes. On the other hand, it is probably good to be perceived as scary when you are pissed off. More respect and all. It’s not like I feel like I get an overabundance of that from my superiors.

Yes, it is easy to favor the top students in the class who show up expecting to work, capable, and happy to learn. On the other hand, I spend a lot of time with some students who are not very strong. Unsurprisingly, many of these end up becoming top performers when they put the effort in, but some don’t. I hope I give them the help they deserve, and appreciation/admiration for the effort they put in to doing well in my class.

I think the professor means well, but does not take into consideration that not everyone in the class loves mathematics as much as she does, but rather are in the course to simply get 3 hours of credit.

Seriously? Please, please, please drop my class. No senior level science or engineering class is going to give you 3 hours of credit for just showing up. If you don’t care to learn, there’s nothing I can do for you. Go find a teacher who doesn’t care.

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There are plenty of nice comments, which get swamped out of my emotional buffer by the ones above. What’s the real picture? It is so hard to tell.

Learned more about matlab in this class than I have in the past 3 years

Honestly can say that Dr. (Jinx) is one of the best teachers I’ve encountered at this university and hope she continues to teach as well as she has been.

Encourages class participation, provides examples, effective communicator.

Instructor is very honest and humble. This is something not so easy to come by in some professors.

Finally learning how to put all the math I learned all of my life into proper use.

The student below gave me a B rating on the item “Written assignments are interesting and stimulating” with the following quote:

Lorenz equations opened my mind a little more. One of those things that keep you interested in mathematics.

So am I doing okay? Now there is the question.

Friday!

I got to be two people today, as I was substituting from my significant other, who is travelling. I visited with two graduate students who are worried about finding jobs. I spent some time with one of my students working on the project, which was due yesterday, but this student actually has an extension until today. I put papers together for my TAs. I went to the Mathematical Biology Class. I emailed a few students who didn’t have extensions and who didn’t hand in project reports; one had an “ooops!!!!!” moment and was grateful, at least. I visited briefly with a colleague with a question about grading a problem I’d put on an exam last semester. And that was it. That was all I got done today.

Unfortunately, none of my grading and none of the REU applications I needed to work on got worked on, but I guess that’s what weekends are for.

I had lunch with a friend today, always a good thing.

Posted in me

Valentine’s Day

Lunch with two of my favorite former students today. That was enjoyable! Happy Valentine’s Day.

Project 1 is due today. Office hours went from after class (3:35 pm) to 6 pm, at which point it was time for me to be done. I returned home with a headache. A few minor crises this evening, one solved by “just put that in your document and resubmit it”. One, “yes, your partner requested an extension to Monday and that applies to you too.” One “my connection with the Calclab isn’t working!” at 10:30 pm, which I think I am not going to answer until tomorrow. At the earliest.

My students are learning many things. Not always what I intended to teach them. Many lessons are being learned about math and writing and the real world and all of its awesome complexity.

Writing is hard, and because it is hard, it is often left to the last minute, which doesn’t make it any easier. We want to sound smart and important, but good writing often consists of making things simple and straightforward. It is hard to write something smart, to spend time and effort and energy on it, and then decide that it has to go because it isn’t simple or straightforward.

I am grateful for the opportunity to teach. I am grateful for those who try to learn from me. I am grateful for having a job that I care about and students who care to learn and try.

I am grateful for my special someone, who is not at home today. I am grateful for salads that he makes. I am grateful to have someone who cares about me. I am grateful for the help around the house and with the yard work. I am grateful that I can help out by taking his class when he is gone. I am grateful that he supports my teaching and my mission. I am grateful that he is patient with my many imperfections.

Things to Appreciate

There’s nothing quite like seeing one of your former students give a seminar to current students, especially when she does a great job. She is now a graduate student with a friend and colleague. I was able to help put those two together in what has been a good collaboration. I am proud of that! The colleague gave the other half of the seminar. He always does a good job; I enjoy his talks. About half my current students were in attendance.

It was fantastic to see my current students asking tons of questions in the seminar tonight. #1 thing I want to help give them is the courage to ask their questions. Okay. I can’t give them courage. I want them to know they have my approval and encouragement for asking their questions. That, perhaps, I have managed to do.

I really was lucky last year in all the things my students accomplished. I was really lucky in having two of my students come with me to MathFest last August. It was so much fun to seeing the world through their eyes.

Sometimes things work out really well, and when they do, you should treasure it. Because there are plenty of times when they aren’t going to work out so well, and you are going to have to use the emotional fuel you are storing to get through it.

I hope I get to bring some of this year’s students with me to MathFest again. I know, I know, it won’t be quite the same as that first time, but I hold out hope that it will be nearly as much fun.

Personalities

Classes really do have personalities. My morning class has its act together. They are hard at work; they get things done. On the most part, they do them well. The afternoon class struggles. Same material, same day, it always takes longer in the afternoon. If work is undone on assignments, it’s the afternoon class with several members who didn’t get it done. If a group is not paying attention, it’s the afternoon class. If part of the class seems lost on the topic, it’s the afternoon class. I am trying not to be down on that class, but it’s the afternoon class.

I try to use the morning class to keep my spirits up. In the afternoon, spirits up, I just keep trying. There are several students in that class that I really like and who are doing very well. Keep those students moving forward. Help the others as much as I can. Try not to worry about it. When lower grades are earned, they will be recorded. That’s only fair.

I wish I knew what I could change. I am smart enough to recognize that maybe there is nothing I can do to change the class. Each individual person decides what to put in or not; I don’t get to make that choice for them. I still wish there was something I could do to make everyone happy and productive.

Every day, every student, I interact with, I want to bring that student an “I am glad to see you.” Even when I am frustrated and tired. Even when I have to explain the same thing again. It’s hard. I hope I am succeeding at bringing each student an “I am glad to see you,” even when it seems like the other lessons are not sinking in!

5k Day

The ε>0 exercise plan continues. I did a 5k today. A friend was doing her first one; I came out to run in support.

I still remember my first 5k. I was about 30? Maybe 29 years old. I had done some running before, but it was hard and it rarely lasted for long. My main form of exercise at that time was a martial arts class, and I hadn’t gone in a while. After another lazy day, I went out one evening and surprised myself by how far I managed to run. Perhaps a more accurate description would be a slow jog. I did my first 5k not long after that. I think I finished in about 31 minutes, and I was thrilled. I ran a 5k! That is more than 3 miles! And I wasn’t last!

I’ve since done many 5ks. And many 10ks (you know that is more than 6 miles?), and a handful of half-marathons (13.1 miles!), although I think I’ve sworn them off after that last one. I’ve had an ambition to do a marathon (26.2!) twice, both times it got discouraged by IT band issues after I got up to a 15 mile run. That was heart breaking; I’ve eliminated that ambition from my diet.

The last half-marathon was at the beginning of December. It’s a long way to fall from doing most of a half marathon to finding 6 minutes of running taxing, but I managed it. I’ve been getting out to run maybe once a week. I knew better than to expect much today. Letting go of the past is hard. Today’s 5k was completed in 32:50, which is not half bad all things considered. So why do I feel disappointed?

A few years ago I ran a 5k in under 29 minutes. I think in under 28 minutes. I nearly threw up; boy was I pleased with myself.

Where does all that excitement go, between that first one where I would have been thrilled (THRILLED!) at 32:50, and today, where I am struggling with disappointment over the 32:50? I wish I knew, and I wish I could get it back. I suspect it’s stolen my motivation away along with it.

How do I reconcile this feeling of personal disappointment with the feeling of admiration for my friend, who ran her first 5k today, finishing in about 52 minutes, which is a damn fine time when you are older than 60. She did a mixture of run-walking, run for a minute, walk for two. Ran in the last bit. It is admirable to start on a running plan at any age. To stick to your plan for 52 minutes and get through the race, not letting the young, fast whippersnappers make you feel bad about what you can do. As Nike says, “Just do it.”

Maybe there it is, maybe that is exactly the lesson for me. It’s easy to be happy and motivated when you are doing something new. Success going forward means sticking to your plan and getting through the race, not letting the young, fast, whippersnapper you remember yourself being get in the way of what you can do today.

I am justifiably angry, but boy, do I feel bitchy.

Something on the order of 10-20 emails later, I finally got my speaker on the schedule for the undergraduate seminar. I handled most of the arrangements; I’ve been trying to get this scheduled since the beginning of the semester. The speaker is coming next week Wednesday; I think it was long past time!

I just want you to imagine for a second how much frustration is built in to working with someone who requires 10-20 requests and reminders to do a fairly routine and straightforward job of putting a speaker on a schedule, reserving a room and designating a time. It would have been easier if I had just had a special seminar for this speaker, arranging the room and time myself.

Needless to say, I am not going to work with that undergraduate seminar organizer again any time soon if I can avoid it. Of course, my boss may dictate that I can’t avoid it. It’s sad, because I have another (good) speaker lined up for that seminar, and I’m not willing to put either of us through this nonsense.
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I feel tense and angry. Describing the interactions earlier today, I’ve said I had to throw a hissy fit in order to get the job done. I feel like a real bitch.

I look at those judgments. I got justifiably angry after so many repeated requests. “I threw a hissy fit,” really? I think everyone is within their rights to get angry and frustrated under those circumstances. Having to make repeated strident requests of someone to please do their job … it feels bitchy, but is that bitchy? It is the helplessness and frustration of having to work with someone who is not working.

Since I am female and I am angry and frustrated, even I label myself as bitchy.

I think men (and other women) deemed special and important find those of us deemed less special and less important (in part because of our gender) easy to ignore and blow off. Too often we get labeled as bitchy when someone blow us off and we don’t go along with it. And, sadly, even I cooperate with this and label myself as bitchy.

I feel bitchy.

But I think I was justifiably angry. Very angry. And very justified.

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Today one of the “participation points” opportunities in class was to explain the difference between two Matlab calls to the differential equation solver ode45(). The function, ode45(), solves differential equations of the form
$$\dfrac{d\mathbf{x}}{dt} = \mathbf{f}(t,\mathbf{x})$$
where \(\mathbf{x}\) can be a vector and \(t\) is your independent variable (usually time). The syntax to ode45() is ode45(function, time span, initial condition). The function is the \(\mathbf{f}(t,\mathbf{x})\) in the differential equation. The time span can be given two different ways. I put the following two sets of commands up on the board with a request to explain what each did.

tspan = [0 50];
[t u] = ode45(@lorenz, tspan, u0);

or

tspan = 0:0.01:50;
[t u] = ode45(@lorenz, tspan, u0);

To you the difference may not be obvious (although I hope you could easily Just Ask Google). Possibly it is not obvious to the students either, but I know they are about to get bitten by this in some code they have to write. My students have been instructed to Just Ask Google, I think everyone in the class can figure this out.

Recall that a solution to a differential equation is a function \(\mathbf{x}(t)\). Matlab can’t give you back a function, it gives you back a vector t with the time values and a matrix u where the rows are the components of \(\mathbf{x}\) evaluated at the corresponding time in t

If I give only the start time and end time, tspan = [0 50], Matlab will decide where to evaluate my function \(\mathbf{x}(t)\) in between those points. If I dictate the points in the middle of the range, then Matlab will evaluate \(\mathbf{x}(t)\) where I tell it to. This is useful, since otherwise two solutions to a differential equation may be evaluated at different points, and you may wish to compare them by, for example, finding the distance between them.

Several students found out in office hours that paying attention in class is actually worth while. Running into precisely this problem, I first asked if they remembered what we discussed about this in class. Then I asked if they could bring out their notes from class (notes?!?). Then I had them pull out a piece of paper and wrote out the two commands that had been on the board and I asked again what was the difference. I then reinforced the idea that I really do try to do useful things in class and I would really appreciate it if they paid attention and took notes.

I managed all of this with a fairly even temper.

My patience was tested further by a student unable to solve the differential equation
$$\frac{dx}{dt} = x$$
No signs of intelligence whatsoever after I suggested separation of variables. A differential equations course is a prerequisite for this class, and “I don’t remember anything!” is not much of an excuse. I bitterly blame his differential equations instructor for lax standards, and the sad thing is, she’s the person I see in the mirror every morning as I brush my teeth!

Math formulas courtesy of MathJax, which is awesome and you should check it out.

R-e-s-p-e-c-t

What if doing what you love, and what you are truly good at, is something that is undervalued, something not respected. A career-limiting proposition. Underpaid, and likely to remain so.

Right now, that’s what I’m thinking. About me. About my career. About teaching.

I keep circling back to the #1 thing, which is that I love it. I think I am truly good at it. Then there are the days when nothing seems to come together. Then there are the moments when it all comes together.

It’s not about me and my brilliant lecture, or my carefully written assignments. It is all about them and what they learned and what they are taking away from this time we’ve spent together, from the time they’ve spent alone, learning.

I can live with being underpaid, but I’d rather not be. I have a hard time with the not respected. I think I should do something about that. Command respect. Sometimes I need to command a little more respect, and I don’t know how. My voice feels silenced.

I get that I work in a research university, and that research is king. But it is a research university. Isn’t teaching the mission of a university? Aren’t the students the reason to have the university?

And yes, I, too, find those pesky students mighty inconvenient from time-to-time, when I have to get other work done. When someone that I don’t even know is knocking on my office door asking me for help with a homework problem that I didn’t assign.

If I had my choice between working with a student and other work, I’d rather work with the student. There is nothing on this earth like the feeling of seeing someone get it.

There has to be a balance between the two missions. Research and teaching. A balance where both are valued and both are respected.

I feel like we are way out of balance. Respect for the teaching mission, at least where I’ve been lately, seems hard to come by.

I am going to hold my head high, and I am going to do the what I can to be respectable and respectful. I will not always be quick enough with my words to rebuff all of the disrespect that come my way. Others will look down on me, nothing I can do about that.

Secrets to Success

If the math on this page is not formatted correctly, try reloading the page.

Some problems with a colleague have me thinking back to the list I gave my students at the beginning of the semester:

  • Show up on time for class.
  • Bring a smile or a kind word for someone in our class every single day.
  • Stay in the classroom for the entire class period.
  • Participate.
  • Use class time productively for class work.
  • Be professional.

Is that everything required for success? Of course not. But if you are struggling with the list, you are probably also struggling to achieve success. Strange how that goes hand-in-hand.

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What are we learning in class these days? We are working on Project 1, which is all about the Lorenz attractor. We are going to use Matlab to solve the system of differential equations in the Lorenz attractor, and then make graphs that show clearly that we see the butterfly effect.

Merriam-Webster definition of BUTTERFLY EFFECT:

a property of chaotic systems (as the atmosphere) by which small changes in initial conditions can lead to large-scale and unpredictable variation in the future state of the system

The Lorenz attractor is an example of a chaotic system

Merriam-Webster definition of CHAOS:

2b : the inherent unpredictability in the behavior of a complex natural system (as the atmosphere, boiling water, or the beating heart)

I skipped definition 1 and 2a, since 2b is the one of concern to us. The Lorenz attractor is unpredictable, but it is deterministic there is no element of chance involved; it does what it does.

One of the first struggles that students have is to figure out what system is the the Lorenz attractor a mathematical model for? Students often answer that it is a mathematical model for the butterfly effect, because that is what we will demonstrate in the project we do for our class. Lorenz’s equations actually model convection in the atmosphere where you have a fluid (such as air) heated from below and cooled from above. We expect that heat rises, so the air molecules rise when heated, then they fall when cooled. This forms a circulatory pattern, which is, unsurprisingly, what we see when we solve the differential equations for the Lorenz attractor.

One question I posed to my students is whether or not the behavior of

$$\frac{dx}{dt} = x \qquad \hbox{with}\ x(0) = 1 \qquad \hbox{or}\ x(0)= 1.001$$
is an example of the butterfly effect and chaos. Notice that solutions are of the form
$$x(t) = Ae^t$$ with \(A = 1\) or \(A=1.001\) respectively. This is clearly not chaotic, we can predict what \(x(t)\) will equal at any time. But equally clearly, it is very sensitive to the initial conditions; small changes in the initial condition lead to large changes at \(x(10)\) or \(x(15)\). Is this an example of the butterfly effect?

This example is not chaos. This is a demonstration of sensitive dependence on initial conditions. But since it is not in a chaotic system, it is not a demonstration of the butterfly effect. Now contrast that picture with what you see for the Lorenz attractor.

I hope running through these questions help them to figure out (mathematical) chaos, and just how cool the Lorenz attractor is.

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I am using MathJax to make the mathematics on this page!