Saturday, July 1

I have plenty of pet peeves about academics, here is one. If you are going to send a response to a query on a mailing list, how about taking the trouble to make it helpful? People will send notes that resemble thinking out loud more than actual advice. “I think I saw something along those lines in Journal X in year Y, or maybe it was Journal Z in another year, you could try searching those.” How is that helpful? Or, “Try Web site xyz.com (or maybe it was wxyz.com)”. Before sending a note to hundreds (if not thousands) of people, why not actually go and check whether it was xyz or wxyz? I find such behavior obnoxious. Do these people actually think that they are being helpful or do they at least realize deep down that all they are doing is posing? Either put the two seconds of work into being actually helpful or spare the list from your laziness. It suggests one or more of the following: sloppy work, disrespect, ambivalence, naivete for thinking that sending that kind of a note is actually going to accrue you anything positive from other list members.


Given the number of pet peeves we likely all have, I recommend commenting on this post if you have a mailing-list related pet peeve. Others are likely worth a post onto themselves.

2 comments:

thistle said...

my pet peeve is when a grad student writes to a general-subject list asking if anyone knows any good research on ______, where _________ is so vague and gigantic that they would be able to find a whole section at Borders on it, let alone being able to find a plethora of useful resources in any academic library.

Anonymous said...

I don't read any mailing lists. The worst are graduate student departmental mailing lists, and I eagerly await the day a professor files a libel suit and gives universities a reason to force graduate students not to host them on university machines.