"Midterm week" at college - huh?

Another Yellow Jacket here, and yes, it was a real thing because of Drop Day.

Now that I think about it, it’s kind of strange that we had the midterm thing because back when I was at Tech, we were on the quarter system. You really only had a few weeks before the start of class to the mid-term to get your shit together. Under a semester system, you don’t get that same level of frenziness since there’s more time to catch-up if you’re falling behind. Perhaps that why I was always stressed out of my mind in college.

More often than not, it’s probably just the week that occurs chronologically half-way through the term, and they mark it on the calendar.

Yes, I think this is a good question to ask them.

Where I went, we had a quarter system, with 2 mid terms and a final for math and technical classes. Except for DC Fundamentals. Sort of. The week before finals week, the instructor told another student and me to hang around for a couple minutes after class. After everyone else had left, he told us, “Look, you both got As on your mid terms and As on all your labs. I don’t seen any point in wasting your time making you take a final or wasting my time grading your final. You’ve got an A on your final and for the class. I’ve enjoyed having you as students. Good luck.”

Midterm exams don’t really surprise me either way. Some places make it official, while others don’t.

My institution does not require a midterm exam, nor the reporting of midterm grades; however, when I was an adjunct for the college in the next town over, they required that D’s and F’s be reported via CampusConnect at midterm. It was up to me whether to give a major exam or simply run a current average. The midterm grade did not appear on the students’ transcripts or anywhere else, so I assume it was for the student development folks to be able to get in touch with struggling students and perhaps let them know about tutoring, TRIO, etc.

I’d agree that it’s basically decided by course content. I had some classes where there were only 2 grades: midterm and final exams. I don’t recall any of us bitching about it.

Here is the PDF of the GIT faculty handbook. Midterm exams are not mentioned anywhere in it. There is some picky crap about Finals (which are required except when the prof decides the course doesn’t need one:)). Nothing about midterms. There is a required S/U for 1000/2000 courses at mid-semester, but there is nothing that says an exam is required for that.

This “real thing” nonsense is exactly what I had to deal with. Students who took local urban legends as facts.

And if you want to assert that it was a “real thing” before they switched to semester system, then I pre-request “Cite?” from the faculty handbook at the time.

If students acted like it was a real thing and professors acted like it was a real thing (and I assure you both of these things happened while I was at Tech), then it was a real thing. What the handbook says doesn’t matter to me.

Anyone who graduated from that venerable institution knows it is notorious for telling their student body one thing but actually doing otherwise. They don’t call it “getting the shaft” for nothing.

Thank You.

I even said in my first post that it was unofficial, so no shit it’s not in the faculty handbook. Just because it wasn’t in the faculty handbook doesn’t mean it didn’t happen.

Add me to the list of past students who always had a midterm week, in both Texas and Hawaii literally decades ago.

But what about in practice? The prof in the syllabus says no midterm, or a late midterm, or two exams instead of a midterm. Do you:

Whine and pout and stomp your foot because the prof is obviously doesn’t understand that it’s a “real thing”,

or

Get on with your life?

The prof is in the right, guess which one is the best strategy?

I think the OP’s question is not simply about a “midterm week” but about mandatory midterm exams during that week. Telling us that your college had a midterm week is only useful if you tell us what that actually involved. (Like partypooper did.)

It involved … midterm exams.

Whoa, total shocker out of left field there! Give us some warning next time!

:smiley:

I have no idea what the hell you’re going on about.

FWIW I think it’s more universal (to bend the semantics a bit) at colleges using the ten-week quarter system. If your term is only ten weeks of instruction then the midterm exam has to be sometime late in Week 5 or early Week 6. On the other hand, in my experience, even in the quarter system many professors prefer to administer two or three “ordinary” exams each covering just the most recent few weeks of class material, rather than an official midterm.