Resources › For Students and Parents What to Do If You Have a Bad College Professor Your Options May Be Limited, But There Are Some Things You Can Try Print Hero Images/Getty Images For Students and Parents College Life Academics Before You Arrive Health, Safety, and Nutrition Living On Campus Outside The Classroom Roommates Graduation & Beyond Homework Help Private School Test Prep College Admissions Graduate School Business School Law School Distance Learning View More By Kelci Lynn Lucier Kelci Lynn Lucier Education Expert M.Ed., Higher Education Administration, Harvard University B.A., English and Comparative Literary Studies, Occidental College Kelci Lynn Lucier has worked in higher education for over a decade. She is the author of "College Stress Solutions" and features on many media outlets. Learn about our Editorial Process Updated on March 10, 2019 Perhaps the best way to kill the excitement of a new semester is realizing that one of your professors is not quite what you were hoping for. In fact, he or she might be downright bad. With so many other things to manage—not to mention a class to pass!—knowing what to do when you have a bad college professor can sometimes seem overwhelming. Luckily, even if you're totally stuck with Prof. How-Did-He-Get-This-Job, you still have some options for working around the situation. Switch Classes See if you still have time to switch classes. If you realize your situation early enough, you may have time to switch to another class or even postpone this class until a later semester (when a different professor takes it over). Check with the campus registrar's office about the add/drop deadline and what other classes might be open. Read More What to Do If You're Failing a Class By Kelci Lynn Lucier If you can't switch professors, see if you can just sit in on another lecture section. While this only works for large lecture classes, you might be able to attend a different professor's lectures as long as you still go to your particular discussion sections/seminar. Many classes have the same daily reading and assignments, regardless of who the professor is. See if someone else's lecture or teaching style better matches with your own. Get Help Get help from other students. Chances are you're not alone in struggling with your professor. Check in with other students and see how you can help each other out: meetings after classes? study groups? sharing notes? helping to read each other's papers or lab drafts? Get a tutor. Bad professors often can lead to bad grades. If you find yourself struggling, get a tutor as soon as possible. And don't be shy about it, either—would you feel worse asking for help now or possibly failing (and having to retake the class) again later? Check with a tutoring center, your residence hall staff, or any upper-class students about how to find a tutor as soon as possible. Drop the Class Remember that you have the option of dropping the class—by the deadline. Sometimes, no matter what you do, you can't make it work with a bad professor. If you need to drop the class, make sure you do so by the appropriate deadline. The last thing you need is a bad grade on your transcript on top of the bad experience. Speak With Someone If something serious is going on, speak to someone. There are bad professors that don't teach well, and then there are unfortunately bad professors who say offensive things in a classroom or who treat different kinds of students differently. If you think this is going on, talk to someone as soon as possible. Reach out to your adviser, your RA, other faculty members, the chair of the department, or even the dean or provost to bring the situation to someone's attention. Change Your Approach Take a moment to see how you can change your own approach to the situation. Are you stuck with a professor who you always disagree with? Turn those in-class debates into a well-researched argument paper for your next assignment. Do you think your professor has no idea what he or she is talking about? Show your mastery of the material by turning in a stellar lab report or research paper. Figuring out what you can do, no matter how minor, in dealing with a bad professor is a great way to at least feel like you have some control over the situation! Cite this Article Format mla apa chicago Your Citation Lucier, Kelci Lynn. "What to Do If You Have a Bad College Professor." ThoughtCo, Apr. 5, 2023, thoughtco.com/if-you-have-a-bad-college-professor-793192. Lucier, Kelci Lynn. (2023, April 5). What to Do If You Have a Bad College Professor. Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/if-you-have-a-bad-college-professor-793192 Lucier, Kelci Lynn. "What to Do If You Have a Bad College Professor." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/if-you-have-a-bad-college-professor-793192 (accessed April 25, 2024). copy citation