<p>The only year I've had good teachers, period, has been this year in dual-enrollment. Last quarter, for chem I had a teacher that would get super excited about it during the lectures which helped to make all of us excited. Also, she'd come in before class to individually visit with each of us and make sure we understood everything. Before this year though, I definitely had my share of bad science teachers including a bipolar biology teacher and a physics teacher that accidentally poured boiling water into his glove.</p>
<p>i actually thought that the poster had chemistry with a teacher. LOL
anyways, a chemistry teacher NOT teaching happened to my sister as well. he was generous with grades, though, for he was too lazy to make hard questions.</p>
<p>My chem teacher that I had last year was amazing, so I'm lucky. He knew just about everything about chemistry, even the most randomest things that someone would ask him during class. He also has a degree in English, so he would correct the grammar and punctuation in the class's research papers, but he's still cool. He told chemistry jokes once in a while, and everyone in the class kept laughing at the corniness. He wasn't too careless or too serious, but right in the middle.</p>
<p>In physics however, I ended up with a mediocre teacher that covered the material, but never tried to throw in any humor or excitement in to the class. It was just 40 minutes of boring physics everyday in school.</p>
<p>My Chemistry doesn't teach. The class is complete havoc. People mock each other and yell. He leaves the room to go change. He sits outside and leaves us to do work. He uses a lot of confusing metaphors. He even has a law. The Kerr repulsion law. Everyone was stay away from Kerr. K=ER^2.E is the constant of three feet. But it is fantastic. Did I mention it was honors?</p>