Originally posted by: Eeezee
Originally posted by: alkemyst
Originally posted by: Eeezee
I'm a grad student, working on my PhD in physics, and I think most weeks I'm working a total of at least 60 hours per week. That's typically 11 hours of lecture, 20 hours of teaching the undergrads, and 30 hours of homework. My responsibilities are minimal, but man what a work load! Does this decrease? What's all of this talk about 40 hour work weeks?
30 hours of homework lulz. You sure you are in the right field for you?
I'm going to assume you've never seen the inside of a Jackson textbook... the average turned in homework assignment is 20-40 pages. That's for only one class. It's not hard, but you do have to do a lot of work.
Trust me, I work only 3/4 of the time that some of my peers work. And I passed my qualifier on the first try, which has around a 50% pass rate. I'm pretty sure I'm doing well for myself
I will agree that I never saw a Jackson text you are talking about (jackson is a common name, I don't know if I have another Jackson text in my collection

).
I do know in my classes many spent 20-40 hours a week or more studying / preparing when I just coasted through. The same group thought I misinterpreted my PCAT scores too, since they said it was impossible to score that high the first time

.
I re-thought it out though and law is a lot like history...you have to read a lot to grasp many things in that. A professor wouldn't have to try hard to require even more hours than possible in a week.
That said for my homework assignments I usually turned in more pages than stated and was told usually if this is full of filler you are screwed.
One of my papers is still brought up in my community college. I had a new hire ask if I wrote a paper on computer hacking ever at my school. I am not trying to brag as community college is nothing spectacular, but I like research and writing and that was my intent.