Most things
If I had to change some aspects of my study program, I would start with the fact that the teachers practically do not teach you anything, they only give you basic instructions but do not guide you to improve, at the end of the day you show your work and they tell you the bad what is it, literally if you didn't know how to do it right, you were left helpless with a bad grade, luckily I passed the first year, then in the second year they leave you adrift, you enter the central workshop and do what you already know how to do, the corrections exist but nothing more than that, they never teach you to take a brush, they don't even teach you what material you should dilute the oil with, not even in the workshop that I took they taught me much, most of what I learned absolutely by myself, what I can rescue is that in that workshop I worked more than I thought. I think that what is missing in my career is more commitment to teaching on the part of the professors, who care about the progress of their students, which would be very easy to do since there are very few students per classroom, it would not cost anything for them to take the time to see how each student is working if they were not going to drink coffee every 5 minutes. Perhaps it is for this same reason that we make art so diverse among students, by not having so much guidance from teachers, we free our ways of operating. I hope that the teaching methods will change for the future, I will have faith in the next professors of my faculty once the ones that are still there have died, because they will not leave that job until they are prostrated.
I can imagine how unmotivating it must be not to feel support from your teachers :( I really hope it improves in the future
ResponderEliminarIt's a very harsh criticism, but I agree with several things...
ResponderEliminar