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Remember, schools have many departments and faculty and staff that work together. In a bureaucracy, things can happen quickly or they can happen slowly. Most people that work at schools want to help others, but they are human. When you come to work, do you start with the easiest problems or do you immediately go to the most difficult ones? Being polite and respectful can put our problems at the top of someone's list of things to do. Being rude and disrespectful can put us on the bottom of that list.
Being courteous shows people that we are working to make things as easy as possible for everyone involved. Being rude and having a "chip on our shoulder" does not help - in fact, sometimes it indicates that we will never be happy with a situation no matter how it turns out. Do you want to help people that will be unhappy with anything you do?
Nonverbal Communication
Those that study how people communicate can show that the things we DON'T say can be just as important, or more so, than what we DO say. Being in any given situation communicates something about us. The way we behave in that situation communicates even more information.
Learning to use nonverbal communication to show people we are ready to work with them is important, especially in college and in professional careers. Some behaviors in class are just rude: sleeping, having private conversations, reading non-class related materials, yawning frequently, constantly challenging an instructor, and packing up to go BEFORE class is dismissed.
Developing good working relationships with people is important - we all respond well to someone that pays attention, maintains eye-contact, and cooperates. When in class, please ask yourself, "What type of message am I sending this professor?"
Don't Insult Professors
Wise people will not punch a 600 pound gorilla in the nose - likewise, insulting or creating a conflict with a college professor is not likely to be a game we can win. Even the nicest people have limits as to what they can accept. Some professors are more understanding than others, but all have their limits. Most students want to earn good grades - being polite and courteous helps.
Manners are especially important when
there are problems. Many find asking for help or talking about a problem challenging - it becomes even more difficult if the working relationship we have built is "tarnished" by inconsiderate or rude behavior. Most of us will feel better about resolving problems if we are confident that we conducted ourselves in a positive, respectful, and polite manner.
Have you ever asked for help from someone that you have offended or insulted? It is not an easy thing to do - with hindsight, would it have been easier to have built a positive working relationship from the start?
Being polite and respectful can prevent many problems in life - why not take advantage of that in school? If there are problems extending basic courtesies to others will make them easier to solve.
Classroom Manners
Being polite and respectful in class is not "rocket science." It is really just about using behavior and nonverbal communication to communicate that we value our education.
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