I don't like it when people criticize work (any work, even math homework) without showing the person whose work they're criticizing a way to do it correctly. Like, okay, I can accept it isn't right, but if you don't show them how to do it right, how are they supposed to get better? If all you accomplish is shutting them down, that is not going to magically make them better.
Maybe it's just the time I spent working for my college in academic support as a peer that's talking, but people need support, especially from their teachers/professors. You aren't doing your job as an educator if you aren't helping people who want to learn to understand what they're struggling with. Yeah, some people don't care about their academic performance, but making dedicated students cry because you aren't helping them is not productive for anybody.
I'm still crabby about how my accounting courses both made me cry and brought down my overall GPA because nobody would explain how to do a part of operating expenses that is apparently necessary, but still doesn't make sense to me. You couldn't pay me to write out an accounting report by hand ever again (yes, by hand, for tests). They have programs for that, and I categorically refuse.
Struggling in her love life and art college, Elisa discovers a genie named Lief hidden in her family's heirloom. What starts as a series of wishes to improve her life soon blossoms into an unexpected romance.
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