R&I NV — By Sara Smart, CNN
Updated 1:00 AM ET, Sat December 18, 2021
(CNN)With every new college semester, students are faced with multiple syllabuses outlining the subjects in their classes.
But do students read them thoroughly? One Tennessee professor put it to the test.
Kenyon Wilson is the associate head of performing arts at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga and decided to put an Easter egg in the syllabus for his music seminar class this past semester.
The hint read: “Thus (free to the first who claims; locker one hundred forty-seven; combination fifteen, twenty-five, thirty-five), students may be ineligible to make up classes and …”
This would have led students to a locker that contained a $50 bill, free to the first student to claim it.
But at the end of the semester, when he went to check the locker, the bill was still there.
“It an academic trope that no one reads the syllabus,” Wilson told CNN. “It’s analogous to the terms and conditions when you’re installing software, everyone clicks that they’ve read it when no one ever does.”
The class was made up of 71 students. Wilson told CNN that his syllabus typically doesn’t change much, but with Covid protocols there was some new information this time around.
“There’s a standard boilerplate that doesn’t change. The university has us put a lot of legal stuff towards the end,” Wilson added. “But on the first day of class I told them there was stuff that had changed, and for them to make sure they read it.”
Dr. GringoViejo
Article URL : https://www.cnn.com/2021/12/18/us/tennessee-professor-syllabus-money-trnd/index.html