Table of Contents
Is it bad to email a professor?
“Professors have feelings, too.” Keep your emails respectful and appropriate. “If you’re upset and you write an email, save it as a draft, sleep on it, and then read it again,” Martin says.
Do professors like when you email them?
Professors like it when you see them as people who have lives outside of their classroom (however remotely this may resemble the truth). It doesn’t really matter what you say here, it’s more the ritual of polite interest that counts. If you can make it come off like you genuinely mean it, bonus points for you.
Can you get in trouble for sending a mean email to a professor?
Let’s say you send that hate-filled email anyway: There may be academic probation or a harassment hearing, depending on what you say. If your message makes a professor feel unsafe in any way, there may be an investigation and your school may be able to expel you if they find you a high enough risk.
Is it rude to send an email twice?
Don’t Resend An Email Right Away It could be considered rude if you just re-send an email after not hearing back from the recipient after only a day. Everyone has their own schedule and usually a few days to a week is usually a good amount of time to get back to someone to see if they have received your email or not.
Is it rude to email professors at night?
This question has nothing to do with academia; asking about “academic social norm” doesn’t change the fact that it is no more rude to email a professor, student, colleague, your mom, etc. at midnight than anyone else. Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
When should you email a professor?
According to the collective research, 10 a.m. is the best time to send an email. (11 a.m. ranked right up there, too.) Surprisingly, the time slot between 8 p.m. and midnight ranked as the second-best time.
How do you deal with a rude lecturer?
So, how do you deal with rude professors? Do your best to ignore their arrogance or rudeness and concentrate on the task in hand. Treat the scenario as practice for dealing with condescending or disagreeable people later in life. File a complaint or give them a bad rating if you really feel it’s deserved.