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Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Persistent Sleepers

I had a lecture for the undergraduate students in the post-lunch session. It seemed to be a merry crowd. The students kept filing in at a slow and leisurely pace. I had said 'Good afternoon' to the class before beginning of the class. But I could not keep saying it every time someone walked in.
"Will you kindly say 'Good afternoon' for me to people who keep walking in?" I asked the fellow sitting near the door. He did not say anything - neither yes nor no. But he did not seem enthusiastic about it, and did not say that to the next batch which walked in. So I kept saying it every time a group walked in. I think they missed the sarcasm, and thought I was a very well mannered teacher.
Once they all had settled down in their cushioned comfortable seats, they started their usual activities. A boy in black T-shirt and a girl also in black T-shirt started an animated chat, which I could not hear owing to the distance between us, but could see very well. After some time, I realized they had no intention of letting up, nor were they discussing some point in m my lecture that they had not understood.
"Will you kindly stop chatting?" I said. "It is distracting me."
They stopped. The fellow immediately put his head between his forearms on the bench and went to sleep. His chatting friend started showing some interest in what I was saying, probably out of fear of being caught once. Two other girls - one in the last row near the exit and one in the middle near aisle went to sleep. All three kept sleeping throughout my lecture. When I ended, I solved the questions some of the students raised. Then I said,
"Like the problem of persistent occipitoposterior position that we discussed today, there is another problem in medical education - that of persistent sleepers. I request the neighbors of such persistent sleepers in this class to wake up the sleepers after I leave?"
I hope they did as I requested, partly because I was feeling guilty having interrupted a chat between the chatters, and partly because the next teacher would not perhaps take it so kindly if they slept during the class.