The assistant professor doesn't answer e-mails [on hold]












4














I'v already read the similar questions here, but i'm sure those are not applicable in my case.



The assistant reminded us during the last session that we can contact him via email, he is only responsible for a chapter not the whole course. Usually my professor teaches the theory and his assistants handle the exercise sessions.



I tried to contact the person twice via email about fifteen and five days ago respectively, but I have not received any response yet, and I'm not expecting any response at all based on his behaviour before.



I really need an answer before the deadline, so I decided to to contact the professor himself, explaining why and pose my question to him, but after consulting with some academic people this is going to be highly irregular. I don't really know how to handle this in an academically manner.










share|improve this question









New contributor




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put on hold as unclear what you're asking by Thomas, Buzz, scaaahu, Memming, Solar Mike 20 hours ago


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.











  • 1




    Are you confident that there is no technical problem? Can you ask other students if they got replies?
    – quid
    yesterday






  • 1




    @quid 100% positive, in the second email i asked him to upload the slides online which btw he should have done on 14/12 and he did it in about an hour after i sent the second email that could be a coincidence, but still i didn't get any answer on my question. I received an answer from other people so i guess no technical problems at all.
    – Sam B
    yesterday






  • 4




    You probably mean 'professor assistant', as in someone that assists the professor. This is different from being an assistant professor.
    – Pedro Tamaroff
    yesterday






  • 2




    Consider also that he may be receiving your emails and even replying to them, but his replies are for some reason not getting to you. I assume you've checked your spam folder; that's the first place I'd look.
    – Wayne Conrad
    yesterday










  • @WayneConrad had a student complain to me that I had not replied and they did this in the middle of class : they were embarrased when it was their spam box...
    – Solar Mike
    21 hours ago
















4














I'v already read the similar questions here, but i'm sure those are not applicable in my case.



The assistant reminded us during the last session that we can contact him via email, he is only responsible for a chapter not the whole course. Usually my professor teaches the theory and his assistants handle the exercise sessions.



I tried to contact the person twice via email about fifteen and five days ago respectively, but I have not received any response yet, and I'm not expecting any response at all based on his behaviour before.



I really need an answer before the deadline, so I decided to to contact the professor himself, explaining why and pose my question to him, but after consulting with some academic people this is going to be highly irregular. I don't really know how to handle this in an academically manner.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Sam B is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











put on hold as unclear what you're asking by Thomas, Buzz, scaaahu, Memming, Solar Mike 20 hours ago


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.











  • 1




    Are you confident that there is no technical problem? Can you ask other students if they got replies?
    – quid
    yesterday






  • 1




    @quid 100% positive, in the second email i asked him to upload the slides online which btw he should have done on 14/12 and he did it in about an hour after i sent the second email that could be a coincidence, but still i didn't get any answer on my question. I received an answer from other people so i guess no technical problems at all.
    – Sam B
    yesterday






  • 4




    You probably mean 'professor assistant', as in someone that assists the professor. This is different from being an assistant professor.
    – Pedro Tamaroff
    yesterday






  • 2




    Consider also that he may be receiving your emails and even replying to them, but his replies are for some reason not getting to you. I assume you've checked your spam folder; that's the first place I'd look.
    – Wayne Conrad
    yesterday










  • @WayneConrad had a student complain to me that I had not replied and they did this in the middle of class : they were embarrased when it was their spam box...
    – Solar Mike
    21 hours ago














4












4








4







I'v already read the similar questions here, but i'm sure those are not applicable in my case.



The assistant reminded us during the last session that we can contact him via email, he is only responsible for a chapter not the whole course. Usually my professor teaches the theory and his assistants handle the exercise sessions.



I tried to contact the person twice via email about fifteen and five days ago respectively, but I have not received any response yet, and I'm not expecting any response at all based on his behaviour before.



I really need an answer before the deadline, so I decided to to contact the professor himself, explaining why and pose my question to him, but after consulting with some academic people this is going to be highly irregular. I don't really know how to handle this in an academically manner.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Sam B is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











I'v already read the similar questions here, but i'm sure those are not applicable in my case.



The assistant reminded us during the last session that we can contact him via email, he is only responsible for a chapter not the whole course. Usually my professor teaches the theory and his assistants handle the exercise sessions.



I tried to contact the person twice via email about fifteen and five days ago respectively, but I have not received any response yet, and I'm not expecting any response at all based on his behaviour before.



I really need an answer before the deadline, so I decided to to contact the professor himself, explaining why and pose my question to him, but after consulting with some academic people this is going to be highly irregular. I don't really know how to handle this in an academically manner.







email assistant-professor






share|improve this question









New contributor




Sam B is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Sam B is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited yesterday









Alan Dev

1033




1033






New contributor




Sam B is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked yesterday









Sam B

324




324




New contributor




Sam B is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Sam B is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Sam B is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




put on hold as unclear what you're asking by Thomas, Buzz, scaaahu, Memming, Solar Mike 20 hours ago


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.






put on hold as unclear what you're asking by Thomas, Buzz, scaaahu, Memming, Solar Mike 20 hours ago


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.










  • 1




    Are you confident that there is no technical problem? Can you ask other students if they got replies?
    – quid
    yesterday






  • 1




    @quid 100% positive, in the second email i asked him to upload the slides online which btw he should have done on 14/12 and he did it in about an hour after i sent the second email that could be a coincidence, but still i didn't get any answer on my question. I received an answer from other people so i guess no technical problems at all.
    – Sam B
    yesterday






  • 4




    You probably mean 'professor assistant', as in someone that assists the professor. This is different from being an assistant professor.
    – Pedro Tamaroff
    yesterday






  • 2




    Consider also that he may be receiving your emails and even replying to them, but his replies are for some reason not getting to you. I assume you've checked your spam folder; that's the first place I'd look.
    – Wayne Conrad
    yesterday










  • @WayneConrad had a student complain to me that I had not replied and they did this in the middle of class : they were embarrased when it was their spam box...
    – Solar Mike
    21 hours ago














  • 1




    Are you confident that there is no technical problem? Can you ask other students if they got replies?
    – quid
    yesterday






  • 1




    @quid 100% positive, in the second email i asked him to upload the slides online which btw he should have done on 14/12 and he did it in about an hour after i sent the second email that could be a coincidence, but still i didn't get any answer on my question. I received an answer from other people so i guess no technical problems at all.
    – Sam B
    yesterday






  • 4




    You probably mean 'professor assistant', as in someone that assists the professor. This is different from being an assistant professor.
    – Pedro Tamaroff
    yesterday






  • 2




    Consider also that he may be receiving your emails and even replying to them, but his replies are for some reason not getting to you. I assume you've checked your spam folder; that's the first place I'd look.
    – Wayne Conrad
    yesterday










  • @WayneConrad had a student complain to me that I had not replied and they did this in the middle of class : they were embarrased when it was their spam box...
    – Solar Mike
    21 hours ago








1




1




Are you confident that there is no technical problem? Can you ask other students if they got replies?
– quid
yesterday




Are you confident that there is no technical problem? Can you ask other students if they got replies?
– quid
yesterday




1




1




@quid 100% positive, in the second email i asked him to upload the slides online which btw he should have done on 14/12 and he did it in about an hour after i sent the second email that could be a coincidence, but still i didn't get any answer on my question. I received an answer from other people so i guess no technical problems at all.
– Sam B
yesterday




@quid 100% positive, in the second email i asked him to upload the slides online which btw he should have done on 14/12 and he did it in about an hour after i sent the second email that could be a coincidence, but still i didn't get any answer on my question. I received an answer from other people so i guess no technical problems at all.
– Sam B
yesterday




4




4




You probably mean 'professor assistant', as in someone that assists the professor. This is different from being an assistant professor.
– Pedro Tamaroff
yesterday




You probably mean 'professor assistant', as in someone that assists the professor. This is different from being an assistant professor.
– Pedro Tamaroff
yesterday




2




2




Consider also that he may be receiving your emails and even replying to them, but his replies are for some reason not getting to you. I assume you've checked your spam folder; that's the first place I'd look.
– Wayne Conrad
yesterday




Consider also that he may be receiving your emails and even replying to them, but his replies are for some reason not getting to you. I assume you've checked your spam folder; that's the first place I'd look.
– Wayne Conrad
yesterday












@WayneConrad had a student complain to me that I had not replied and they did this in the middle of class : they were embarrased when it was their spam box...
– Solar Mike
21 hours ago




@WayneConrad had a student complain to me that I had not replied and they did this in the middle of class : they were embarrased when it was their spam box...
– Solar Mike
21 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















11














While there may be exceptions, I think that in most places it would be proper to ask the question of the professor. You could also mention that you haven't yet received an answer from the TA. That might get things moving better in the future.



I would't phrase the comment about the TA as an accusation or complaint; Just the fact that you asked, haven't yet heard back, and need the answer.






share|improve this answer





























    36














    15 days ago was the weekend before Christmas, 5 days ago was new years day. I am not surprised the assistant hasn't answered: my university is closed till Monday. Since I have children and the school and kindergarten are also closed till Monday, I have very little time for answering emails. Moreover, this is the time of year to focus on other things than work (why am I writing this answer?).






    share|improve this answer

















    • 6




      This answer seems to assume that the OP is from a country where Christmas is celebrated. I think this is not the case in most of the world.
      – the L
      yesterday






    • 1




      Assuming you are in a country that celebrates Christmas, it is not common sense that (s)he responds in this period. It may be inconvenient, but it makes perfect sense to not work in periods that are holidays. That is what holidays are there for.
      – Maarten Buis
      yesterday






    • 9




      Quite frankly, if you tell students explicitly that they can ask you questions by email yet you plan not to respond to emails for the two weeks right before the exam due to holidays (which is arguably legitimate) then you better also mention that. (If the situation is as described in OP and the questions are reasonable, and they do not respond by choice, I'd consider this as careless behavior on the side of the assistant professor.)
      – quid
      yesterday








    • 3




      @theL I'm atheist and I don't celebrate Christmas. But I still have a long vacation, and I don't want to read work-related emails during my vacation. Make sense?
      – qsp
      yesterday






    • 1




      @theL The vast majority of Stack Exchange users come from a country where Christmas is celebrated.
      – Sparhawk
      yesterday


















    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    11














    While there may be exceptions, I think that in most places it would be proper to ask the question of the professor. You could also mention that you haven't yet received an answer from the TA. That might get things moving better in the future.



    I would't phrase the comment about the TA as an accusation or complaint; Just the fact that you asked, haven't yet heard back, and need the answer.






    share|improve this answer


























      11














      While there may be exceptions, I think that in most places it would be proper to ask the question of the professor. You could also mention that you haven't yet received an answer from the TA. That might get things moving better in the future.



      I would't phrase the comment about the TA as an accusation or complaint; Just the fact that you asked, haven't yet heard back, and need the answer.






      share|improve this answer
























        11












        11








        11






        While there may be exceptions, I think that in most places it would be proper to ask the question of the professor. You could also mention that you haven't yet received an answer from the TA. That might get things moving better in the future.



        I would't phrase the comment about the TA as an accusation or complaint; Just the fact that you asked, haven't yet heard back, and need the answer.






        share|improve this answer












        While there may be exceptions, I think that in most places it would be proper to ask the question of the professor. You could also mention that you haven't yet received an answer from the TA. That might get things moving better in the future.



        I would't phrase the comment about the TA as an accusation or complaint; Just the fact that you asked, haven't yet heard back, and need the answer.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered yesterday









        Buffy

        38.6k7125200




        38.6k7125200























            36














            15 days ago was the weekend before Christmas, 5 days ago was new years day. I am not surprised the assistant hasn't answered: my university is closed till Monday. Since I have children and the school and kindergarten are also closed till Monday, I have very little time for answering emails. Moreover, this is the time of year to focus on other things than work (why am I writing this answer?).






            share|improve this answer

















            • 6




              This answer seems to assume that the OP is from a country where Christmas is celebrated. I think this is not the case in most of the world.
              – the L
              yesterday






            • 1




              Assuming you are in a country that celebrates Christmas, it is not common sense that (s)he responds in this period. It may be inconvenient, but it makes perfect sense to not work in periods that are holidays. That is what holidays are there for.
              – Maarten Buis
              yesterday






            • 9




              Quite frankly, if you tell students explicitly that they can ask you questions by email yet you plan not to respond to emails for the two weeks right before the exam due to holidays (which is arguably legitimate) then you better also mention that. (If the situation is as described in OP and the questions are reasonable, and they do not respond by choice, I'd consider this as careless behavior on the side of the assistant professor.)
              – quid
              yesterday








            • 3




              @theL I'm atheist and I don't celebrate Christmas. But I still have a long vacation, and I don't want to read work-related emails during my vacation. Make sense?
              – qsp
              yesterday






            • 1




              @theL The vast majority of Stack Exchange users come from a country where Christmas is celebrated.
              – Sparhawk
              yesterday
















            36














            15 days ago was the weekend before Christmas, 5 days ago was new years day. I am not surprised the assistant hasn't answered: my university is closed till Monday. Since I have children and the school and kindergarten are also closed till Monday, I have very little time for answering emails. Moreover, this is the time of year to focus on other things than work (why am I writing this answer?).






            share|improve this answer

















            • 6




              This answer seems to assume that the OP is from a country where Christmas is celebrated. I think this is not the case in most of the world.
              – the L
              yesterday






            • 1




              Assuming you are in a country that celebrates Christmas, it is not common sense that (s)he responds in this period. It may be inconvenient, but it makes perfect sense to not work in periods that are holidays. That is what holidays are there for.
              – Maarten Buis
              yesterday






            • 9




              Quite frankly, if you tell students explicitly that they can ask you questions by email yet you plan not to respond to emails for the two weeks right before the exam due to holidays (which is arguably legitimate) then you better also mention that. (If the situation is as described in OP and the questions are reasonable, and they do not respond by choice, I'd consider this as careless behavior on the side of the assistant professor.)
              – quid
              yesterday








            • 3




              @theL I'm atheist and I don't celebrate Christmas. But I still have a long vacation, and I don't want to read work-related emails during my vacation. Make sense?
              – qsp
              yesterday






            • 1




              @theL The vast majority of Stack Exchange users come from a country where Christmas is celebrated.
              – Sparhawk
              yesterday














            36












            36








            36






            15 days ago was the weekend before Christmas, 5 days ago was new years day. I am not surprised the assistant hasn't answered: my university is closed till Monday. Since I have children and the school and kindergarten are also closed till Monday, I have very little time for answering emails. Moreover, this is the time of year to focus on other things than work (why am I writing this answer?).






            share|improve this answer












            15 days ago was the weekend before Christmas, 5 days ago was new years day. I am not surprised the assistant hasn't answered: my university is closed till Monday. Since I have children and the school and kindergarten are also closed till Monday, I have very little time for answering emails. Moreover, this is the time of year to focus on other things than work (why am I writing this answer?).







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered yesterday









            Maarten Buis

            21.4k34870




            21.4k34870








            • 6




              This answer seems to assume that the OP is from a country where Christmas is celebrated. I think this is not the case in most of the world.
              – the L
              yesterday






            • 1




              Assuming you are in a country that celebrates Christmas, it is not common sense that (s)he responds in this period. It may be inconvenient, but it makes perfect sense to not work in periods that are holidays. That is what holidays are there for.
              – Maarten Buis
              yesterday






            • 9




              Quite frankly, if you tell students explicitly that they can ask you questions by email yet you plan not to respond to emails for the two weeks right before the exam due to holidays (which is arguably legitimate) then you better also mention that. (If the situation is as described in OP and the questions are reasonable, and they do not respond by choice, I'd consider this as careless behavior on the side of the assistant professor.)
              – quid
              yesterday








            • 3




              @theL I'm atheist and I don't celebrate Christmas. But I still have a long vacation, and I don't want to read work-related emails during my vacation. Make sense?
              – qsp
              yesterday






            • 1




              @theL The vast majority of Stack Exchange users come from a country where Christmas is celebrated.
              – Sparhawk
              yesterday














            • 6




              This answer seems to assume that the OP is from a country where Christmas is celebrated. I think this is not the case in most of the world.
              – the L
              yesterday






            • 1




              Assuming you are in a country that celebrates Christmas, it is not common sense that (s)he responds in this period. It may be inconvenient, but it makes perfect sense to not work in periods that are holidays. That is what holidays are there for.
              – Maarten Buis
              yesterday






            • 9




              Quite frankly, if you tell students explicitly that they can ask you questions by email yet you plan not to respond to emails for the two weeks right before the exam due to holidays (which is arguably legitimate) then you better also mention that. (If the situation is as described in OP and the questions are reasonable, and they do not respond by choice, I'd consider this as careless behavior on the side of the assistant professor.)
              – quid
              yesterday








            • 3




              @theL I'm atheist and I don't celebrate Christmas. But I still have a long vacation, and I don't want to read work-related emails during my vacation. Make sense?
              – qsp
              yesterday






            • 1




              @theL The vast majority of Stack Exchange users come from a country where Christmas is celebrated.
              – Sparhawk
              yesterday








            6




            6




            This answer seems to assume that the OP is from a country where Christmas is celebrated. I think this is not the case in most of the world.
            – the L
            yesterday




            This answer seems to assume that the OP is from a country where Christmas is celebrated. I think this is not the case in most of the world.
            – the L
            yesterday




            1




            1




            Assuming you are in a country that celebrates Christmas, it is not common sense that (s)he responds in this period. It may be inconvenient, but it makes perfect sense to not work in periods that are holidays. That is what holidays are there for.
            – Maarten Buis
            yesterday




            Assuming you are in a country that celebrates Christmas, it is not common sense that (s)he responds in this period. It may be inconvenient, but it makes perfect sense to not work in periods that are holidays. That is what holidays are there for.
            – Maarten Buis
            yesterday




            9




            9




            Quite frankly, if you tell students explicitly that they can ask you questions by email yet you plan not to respond to emails for the two weeks right before the exam due to holidays (which is arguably legitimate) then you better also mention that. (If the situation is as described in OP and the questions are reasonable, and they do not respond by choice, I'd consider this as careless behavior on the side of the assistant professor.)
            – quid
            yesterday






            Quite frankly, if you tell students explicitly that they can ask you questions by email yet you plan not to respond to emails for the two weeks right before the exam due to holidays (which is arguably legitimate) then you better also mention that. (If the situation is as described in OP and the questions are reasonable, and they do not respond by choice, I'd consider this as careless behavior on the side of the assistant professor.)
            – quid
            yesterday






            3




            3




            @theL I'm atheist and I don't celebrate Christmas. But I still have a long vacation, and I don't want to read work-related emails during my vacation. Make sense?
            – qsp
            yesterday




            @theL I'm atheist and I don't celebrate Christmas. But I still have a long vacation, and I don't want to read work-related emails during my vacation. Make sense?
            – qsp
            yesterday




            1




            1




            @theL The vast majority of Stack Exchange users come from a country where Christmas is celebrated.
            – Sparhawk
            yesterday




            @theL The vast majority of Stack Exchange users come from a country where Christmas is celebrated.
            – Sparhawk
            yesterday



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