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Stephanie G Wilson, PhD's avatar

Awesome post, Amanda Litman. First, I want to let you know that your Saturday night dinners sound amazing. I don't have a toddler anymore but am always looking for ways to connect to friends of have drifted, especially after the pandemic. Second, I don't get enough engagement to hit the negatives like you did, but if you change the frame a bit, you're actually reaching people. We all feel like we're screaming into the void because our world is turned upside down. They found you an easy target to yell at, probably in part b/c you imply they might have agency and accountability (though we ALL know that this coup is NOT Dems' fault, but they could be better and stronger leaders in countering it). One of the things I'm thinking a lot about is how do we actually reach people who are in different information bubbles, and maybe your bruises show you're on the right path. Being provocative gets the most eyeballs, so if you can keep getting those eyeballs for things you KNOW are important, that is a good, albeit shitty and painful thing to experience.

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Marcia Caton Campbell's avatar

Not surprisingly, reading one’s student evaluations at the end of a course is a similar experience to the negative comments you’ve experienced. The anonymity of the evaluation renders the feedback as if it comes from a stranger, though it is sometimes possible to discern who is providing the feedback if their writing voice comes through in open-ended responses. Ruminating on the negative feedback—however small a proportion of the whole—occupies far too much mental space between the end of one semester and the start of the next.

On another note, your Saturday night dinners sound relaxed and delicious!

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