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POLL: skip class or go?

hdeck

Lifer
so my teacher is in europe for some seminar so the TA will be teaching class today. i'm sitting here thinking this could be quite a painful experience.

should i go??!?!

btw, this is my international finance class.
 
that would be respectfully abstaining.

then again if you don't care why did you click the thread? furthermore why take the type to type a response and use the bandwidth to reply? these questions and many more answered on next week's episode!
 
Originally posted by: hdeck
that would be respectfully abstaining.

then again if you don't care why did you click the thread? furthermore why take the type to type a response and use the bandwidth to reply? these questions and many more answered on next week's episode!

But I don't want to be respectful....
 
:roll: just go, chances are your TA will talk about stuff on future exams and such, or he will let students ask question to answer which will help also with homework and exams, or he will close class early if he has nothing to say
 
I would go...and if it's boring or completely pointless..i'd leave early. I'd go just in case he took attendance or something.
 
we are discussing an article on the increased protectionism governments are showing when dealing with outside countries (mainly developing ones) trying to aquire domestic businesses or something.

oh and how central banks can keep a fixed exchange rate regime.
 
Originally posted by: hdeck
we are discussing an article on the increased protectionism governments are showing when dealing with outside countries (mainly developing ones) trying to aquire domestic businesses or something.

oh and how central banks can keep a fixed exchange rate regime.

Oh, it is a business class. Don't then, skip it.
 
sometimes going to a class taught by a TA is better than those taught by the professor. TAs sometimes really know how to cut through the BS the professor might normally linger in.
 
Originally posted by: hdeck
we are discussing an article on the increased protectionism governments are showing when dealing with outside countries (mainly developing ones) trying to aquire domestic businesses or something.

oh and how central banks can keep a fixed exchange rate regime.

That seems interesting. I would go to that one.
 
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