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Re: [help-GIFT] Questions and code...
From: |
risc |
Subject: |
Re: [help-GIFT] Questions and code... |
Date: |
Tue, 1 Aug 2006 11:15:45 -0500 |
User-agent: |
Mutt/1.4.1i |
On Tue, Aug 01, 2006 at 04:37:25PM +0100, David Squire wrote:
> address@hidden wrote:
> >On Tue, Aug 01, 2006 at 09:32:04AM +0200, Wolfgang Müller wrote:
> >
> >>Busy: yes. Sorry for that.
> >>Professor: no. I am still waiting to become associate prof. Under that,
> >>people in germany are not called professor.
> >>
> >
> >Sorry about that, in my experience at local universities, the only people
> >I run
> >into with a "Dr." atached to their names are professors. ;)
> >
>
> Let me guess... you are in the States? (Well, your ISP is in Arkansas :)
> ) The rest of the world uses the term "Professor" very differently. In
> Australia, the UK, and most if not all of the Commonwealth, only the
> very most senior academics are Professors (e.g. Head of Department or
> School, and not necessarily even then). I believe this is similar in
> most of Europe.
>
You guessed it! and of course, being an american, i'm convinced that everything
outside is sticks, and mud huts, right? ;)
> For example, in Australia it goes:
>
> Assistant Lecturer
> Lecturer
> Senior Lecturer
> Associate Professor (or Reader)
> Professor
> Death
>
> Cheers,
>
> David
>
Thanks for the info. here, they start at associate professor.
and boy, do us americans have a low opinion of "professors" as a result. ;)
I spent three years as technical staff of a local university. low opinion
dosent cover it. :)
>
> --
> Dr David McG. Squire, Senior Lecturer, on sabbatical in 2006
> Caulfield School of Information Technology, Monash University, Australia
> CRICOS Provider No. 00008C http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~davids/
Julia Longtin <address@hidden>
No Degrees, No Medals, Hell, barely passed high school!
*tinkers more with gift's internals*