<p>Ageism. I know LSAT/GPA is king or whatnot, because I do want to go to law school. However, you demonstrate extreme immaturity if you think burning bridges and playing stupid shenanigans like putting up posters won’t hurt you in the long run. I doubt you’ll achieve anything, and looking at your code, giving you an A- is probably generous.
Stop being ****y over stupid things; I somehow doubt this .9 or whatnot (it’ll be less by the time you actually apply to law school, btw) will make a difference.</p>
<p>That’s not great. A 720 on the SAT… if you want to play childish games, I got a 780 first time. And, I would think you would have learned this from as a kid but… LIFE IS UNFAIR.
Community colleges are less likely to even care what you say.</p>
<p>DreamingBig, how does it feel like being an academic failure that gets a “B” in a community college and takes 3 years to complete 2 years of coursework? How does it feel like being on the lowest level of academia?</p>
<p>The SAT writing section is a terrible way to gauge one’s writing ability, and if you think you’re a good writer because you scored 700+ on the SAT writing section … well, I don’t really know what to say to that. Congrats for being a good test-taker with a decent grasp of the English language?</p>
<p>^ Lol. The SAT Writing actually teaches you to be a bad writer, past grammar. The essays are so far from any writing class assignments it’s ridiculous.</p>
<p>OP, I do not think your appeal has a chance in **ll but I do want to raise a risk. At the colleges I attended a student could get test/assignments regraded but they had to be willing to accept that their grade could stay the same … go up … or go down. Personally, I thinking risking your A- hoping for bump up due to the letter of law of the rubic is a big risk since the downside if graded by the spirit of the assignment is much worse … and after your appeal you could end up with a worse grade.</p>
<p>3togo, I’m not going to appeal because I realize that’s a real possibility (The lowering of my A-) because the chairperson of the computer science department will side with him before even hearing my argument.
It’s a shame because if there weren’t any negative consequences, I would definitely appeal this even if only to make his life hell for a couple of weeks for trying to screw me over.</p>
<p>I don’t get why some of you think I’m some entitled brat who lashes out at others when he doesn’t get his way because that’s far from the truth. I have a legitimate case here but I won’t risk my A- knowing that the classless professors in this CS department always have each others back even when the student is clearly in the right.</p>
<p>I will send him a nice parting e-mail though. Can’t let him get away with that last condescending e-mail thinking he’s won the war. I need to remind him of his place on the life food chain. He seems to think he’s something more than just a lowly CC adjunct professor who’s had one too many donuts for every day over the past twenty years.</p>
<p>Well, it’s because you take the low road when you say things like this:</p>
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<p>And this:</p>
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<p>I suppose it’s quite likely that you are not as bad a guy as you seem from your self-presentation in this thread. If you acted this way all the time, several people would have beaten the crap out of you by now.</p>
<p>Quoting him, from the “Are East Coast girls more prejudiced against Asians?” thread:
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<p>To the OP: Good luck in your future career, and if you want to be such a stuck-up narcissist, please do the rest of the world a favor and find a lonely tower (with a suitable number of mirrors) and lock yourself away. Forever.</p>