For the sake of my further points, I will call this portion ENFP existence.
I don't understand why you're taking these comments and turning them into your example. It's easy to pick and choose.. but here's what's happening:
1. You presented your case
2. I give you my analysis based on the facts you presented
3. You present more facts that were withheld earlier.
4. I assume they're excuses for earlier facts, and so I try to rationalize them in with the earlier case.
5. You give even more details that were totally excluded before, because eventually if you give enough information someone will get tired of arguing with you and just tell you you're right.
All I was doing is giving you what I would see from the teacher, if she was an ENFP at all. It was a very different perspective from what you'd seen.. but you were very defensive about it. I'll leave it alone now, because you presenting more and more evidence to support your initial case is tiring. Have fun winning.
Easy for you to say! It's not your A!
And p.s., bullshit! The teacher assigns the value. She gives however many points she thinks things are worth. That is not some absolute that we can all accept without question. Just because it's expressed as a number does not mean it's an objective fact. It's all very personal -- how the teacher evaluates, what makes her try to assume professional distance when she's asked to change a grade for cause but makes her drop professional distance when she announces she forgot something important to TG as if it is cute, all of that is personal and subjective.
I can be very, very vocal about my grades. But I do not allow a grade to be wrongly graded and let it go for a while, and then complain about it later on again. I say it right then and there, and I do not leave the issue alone until it is resolved one way or another. It is the only way to get it done right in college. Waiting just makes it worse.
If the timestamp was wrong.. why wait until after grades were published to complain *again*? Im sure she said something beforehand.. but she didn't make enough of a fuss to make something happen then to fix it.
All in all.. when I asked TG if she could come up with the 20 points she needed, she couldn't. She could only come up with, at the most, 18. Either way, she fell short.. Like I said before.. asking for 2 or 3 points if you're an outstanding student is sometimes okay to do, depending on the teachers personality (Some may be offended.. others may already grade based on student participation).. Asking a teacher to fix everything to put you up into that area and THEN requesting that just doesn't make any sense to me. For whatever reason, fussing wasn't done when it should have been done. Her requests themselves aren't unreasonable in small chunks.. but all at the end of the year, when grades are official on transcripts and everything, asking her to fix something that won't change her grade entirely is a bit too late.
Nothing is concrete in college, there is only an illusion of it. But knowing how to work that system is what saves you. Asking for it all at the end is useless.
I don't think it's a Te thing. I think TG is just upset she didn't get the grade she wanted. Her arguments really aren't rational, Ti-based, or realistic in this case. I can't imagine asking a teacher to review already-graded work, after grades had been calculated and turned in, based upon the fact that I had issues that prevented me from getting the A I wanted. If she'd had a problem with the way the teacher graded her work, she should have come to her at the time the assignments were handed back. To want to hand in a "representative" piece of work so the teacher might think, "Hey, this is student tried hard and did well on the assignments she wasn't too busy for! I should arbitrarily give her 20 points based upon that fact!" makes no logical sense to me.
I was a student much longer than I've been a teacher, and I'd never have thought of asking any of my teachers to do what she's asking. If she didn't like the teacher's "flaky" ways or method of grading, she had the option of dropping the class. Sometimes you're not going to like your teacher's personality or grading criteria. You kind of vote with your feet in those instances, or accept them and move on.
I've had to drop classes before because teachers were too off. I've had to change professors before.. and I have also had to re-take classes before. You pay for college.. so you should get what you need out of it.
Professors come in all shapes and sizes.. sometimes they're great for students, and sometimes that same professor 'sucks' for another. But that's why there are third-party evaluation websites (I never dream of enrolling in classes without ratemyprofessor.com and I ALWAYS rate my professors when I am done with them.) and people to ask. You can meet with the professor themselves before classes start sometimes, and get to know them.
There are a lot of options to ensure you have good professors.. but even if you do all of that, and they aren't working out for you.. it is your responsibility to drop, change, or stick it out. Because in the end, they are in a different business. They get paid to show up.. they don't pay to show up.
If she's an INTJ, I'll eat my hat, though.
I don't think we ever will.. there are two sides to every story. :3 But totally agreed with this part here.
Just write an angry missive to the head of department and hand deliver it and let him know that if it isn't dealt with satisfactorily then you shall go to his boss and complain.
This was my very first, knee-jerk reaction to what she said when she first posted about her problem in vent.
ENFPs are fun! That's why NTs love us!
