When I taught undergrads, I was fine being called "Rob." Or "professor." Or "Doctor."
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Replying to @drfarls
In my current position "Rob" won't cut it, and I don't care for "Mr. Farley."
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Replying to @drfarls
But here's the thing; "Professor Farley" is not actually accurate, because I'm not a professor; I'm a lecturer.
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Replying to @drfarls
Semantic difference, maybe, but real, and mildly annoying.
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Replying to @drfarls
And so "Dr. Farley" is actually a pretty reasonable compromise on the formality front.
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Replying to @drfarls
And so it really doesn't bother me when someone (even Gorka!) insists on "Dr." in a formal setting.
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Replying to @drfarls
Y'know, we did go through seven years of making $14000/year so we could have middling middle class jobs. Insisting on "Dr." is just fine.
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Replying to @drfarls
You made $14000/year? I didn't even make that and worked extra jobs.
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Replying to @emptywheel
The generosity of the University of Washington...
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To be fair, they did kick off my Czech studies for summer in-state tuition (which someone, maybe Soros, paid for), which was an awesome deal
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