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Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it. | f45c1b42902b9f89b3a1bd4e7e74de2f149c9fe8fe9abb406d6baf6aa1819dbb | [
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"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
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"content": "\"On Bullshit\" by Harry Frankfurt",
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"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
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"content": "Freakanomics is a book which has commercial, easy to read versions of academic papers. Why drug dealers live with their parents is a real good one. The book tackles real issues and uses an evidence basis.",
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"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
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"content": "\"On Bullshit\" by Harry Frankfurt",
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Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it. | f45c1b42902b9f89b3a1bd4e7e74de2f149c9fe8fe9abb406d6baf6aa1819dbb | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "\"On Bullshit\" by Harry Frankfurt",
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"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
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"content": "one interesting text in IR Waever, Ole (2009). \"Waltz's Theory of Theory\". *International Relations*. **23** (2): 201–222 the article introduces a key literature from the philosophy of science about the structure of theory, and particularly about the way even natural science uses theory very differently from the way IR's mainstream thinks it does — and much more like the way Kenneth Waltz wants his theory to be used.",
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"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
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{
"content": "\"On Bullshit\" by Harry Frankfurt",
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Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it. | f45c1b42902b9f89b3a1bd4e7e74de2f149c9fe8fe9abb406d6baf6aa1819dbb | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
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{
"content": "\"On Bullshit\" by Harry Frankfurt",
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"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Baron and Kenny 1986. Only the most cited psychology paper ever (and possibly of all social science): https://www.sesp.org/files/The%20Moderator-Baron.pdf Great explanation of mediation and moderation, anyone interested in how to think about causes and effects should have this in their back pocket.",
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"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
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"content": "\"On Bullshit\" by Harry Frankfurt",
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Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it. | f45c1b42902b9f89b3a1bd4e7e74de2f149c9fe8fe9abb406d6baf6aa1819dbb | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "\"On Bullshit\" by Harry Frankfurt",
"role": "assistant"
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] | [
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"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
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"content": "\"Why Anything? Why This?\" by Derek Parfit. https://www.sfu.ca/\\~rpyke/cafe/parfit.pdf Also, \"What Is It Like To Be a Bat?\" by Thomas Nagel. https://www.sas.upenn.edu/\\~cavitch/pdf-library/Nagel\\_Bat.pdf",
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"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "\"On Bullshit\" by Harry Frankfurt",
"role": "assistant"
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Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it. | f45c1b42902b9f89b3a1bd4e7e74de2f149c9fe8fe9abb406d6baf6aa1819dbb | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "\"On Bullshit\" by Harry Frankfurt",
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}
] | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Ok but like what are you into?",
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"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
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"content": "\"On Bullshit\" by Harry Frankfurt",
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Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it. | f45c1b42902b9f89b3a1bd4e7e74de2f149c9fe8fe9abb406d6baf6aa1819dbb | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Freakanomics is a book which has commercial, easy to read versions of academic papers. Why drug dealers live with their parents is a real good one. The book tackles real issues and uses an evidence basis.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Ok but like what are you into?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Freakanomics is a book which has commercial, easy to read versions of academic papers. Why drug dealers live with their parents is a real good one. The book tackles real issues and uses an evidence basis.",
"role": "assistant"
}
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Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it. | f45c1b42902b9f89b3a1bd4e7e74de2f149c9fe8fe9abb406d6baf6aa1819dbb | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "one interesting text in IR Waever, Ole (2009). \"Waltz's Theory of Theory\". *International Relations*. **23** (2): 201–222 the article introduces a key literature from the philosophy of science about the structure of theory, and particularly about the way even natural science uses theory very differently from the way IR's mainstream thinks it does — and much more like the way Kenneth Waltz wants his theory to be used.",
"role": "assistant"
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] | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Ok but like what are you into?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "one interesting text in IR Waever, Ole (2009). \"Waltz's Theory of Theory\". *International Relations*. **23** (2): 201–222 the article introduces a key literature from the philosophy of science about the structure of theory, and particularly about the way even natural science uses theory very differently from the way IR's mainstream thinks it does — and much more like the way Kenneth Waltz wants his theory to be used.",
"role": "assistant"
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Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it. | f45c1b42902b9f89b3a1bd4e7e74de2f149c9fe8fe9abb406d6baf6aa1819dbb | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Someone mentioned the classic Watson and Crick paper on DNA structure. I present to you a paper that analyzes the WRITING STYLE of the Watson and Crick paper! The Birth of Molecular Biology: An Essay in the Rhetorical Criticism of Scientific Discourse I've always found the Watson and Crick paper very interesting to read (getting a sense of what it would feel like to read it back then), but this paper showing just how much language affects science and the community and the field for years to come just blew my mind.",
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{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Baron and Kenny 1986. Only the most cited psychology paper ever (and possibly of all social science): https://www.sesp.org/files/The%20Moderator-Baron.pdf Great explanation of mediation and moderation, anyone interested in how to think about causes and effects should have this in their back pocket.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Someone mentioned the classic Watson and Crick paper on DNA structure. I present to you a paper that analyzes the WRITING STYLE of the Watson and Crick paper! The Birth of Molecular Biology: An Essay in the Rhetorical Criticism of Scientific Discourse I've always found the Watson and Crick paper very interesting to read (getting a sense of what it would feel like to read it back then), but this paper showing just how much language affects science and the community and the field for years to come just blew my mind.",
"role": "assistant"
}
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Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it. | f45c1b42902b9f89b3a1bd4e7e74de2f149c9fe8fe9abb406d6baf6aa1819dbb | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Someone mentioned the classic Watson and Crick paper on DNA structure. I present to you a paper that analyzes the WRITING STYLE of the Watson and Crick paper! The Birth of Molecular Biology: An Essay in the Rhetorical Criticism of Scientific Discourse I've always found the Watson and Crick paper very interesting to read (getting a sense of what it would feel like to read it back then), but this paper showing just how much language affects science and the community and the field for years to come just blew my mind.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "\"Why Anything? Why This?\" by Derek Parfit. https://www.sfu.ca/\\~rpyke/cafe/parfit.pdf Also, \"What Is It Like To Be a Bat?\" by Thomas Nagel. https://www.sas.upenn.edu/\\~cavitch/pdf-library/Nagel\\_Bat.pdf",
"role": "assistant"
}
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{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Someone mentioned the classic Watson and Crick paper on DNA structure. I present to you a paper that analyzes the WRITING STYLE of the Watson and Crick paper! The Birth of Molecular Biology: An Essay in the Rhetorical Criticism of Scientific Discourse I've always found the Watson and Crick paper very interesting to read (getting a sense of what it would feel like to read it back then), but this paper showing just how much language affects science and the community and the field for years to come just blew my mind.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.25641 | 4.923077 | {
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Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it. | f45c1b42902b9f89b3a1bd4e7e74de2f149c9fe8fe9abb406d6baf6aa1819dbb | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Someone mentioned the classic Watson and Crick paper on DNA structure. I present to you a paper that analyzes the WRITING STYLE of the Watson and Crick paper! The Birth of Molecular Biology: An Essay in the Rhetorical Criticism of Scientific Discourse I've always found the Watson and Crick paper very interesting to read (getting a sense of what it would feel like to read it back then), but this paper showing just how much language affects science and the community and the field for years to come just blew my mind.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Ok but like what are you into?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Someone mentioned the classic Watson and Crick paper on DNA structure. I present to you a paper that analyzes the WRITING STYLE of the Watson and Crick paper! The Birth of Molecular Biology: An Essay in the Rhetorical Criticism of Scientific Discourse I've always found the Watson and Crick paper very interesting to read (getting a sense of what it would feel like to read it back then), but this paper showing just how much language affects science and the community and the field for years to come just blew my mind.",
"role": "assistant"
}
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Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it. | f45c1b42902b9f89b3a1bd4e7e74de2f149c9fe8fe9abb406d6baf6aa1819dbb | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Baron and Kenny 1986. Only the most cited psychology paper ever (and possibly of all social science): https://www.sesp.org/files/The%20Moderator-Baron.pdf Great explanation of mediation and moderation, anyone interested in how to think about causes and effects should have this in their back pocket.",
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{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Ok but like what are you into?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Baron and Kenny 1986. Only the most cited psychology paper ever (and possibly of all social science): https://www.sesp.org/files/The%20Moderator-Baron.pdf Great explanation of mediation and moderation, anyone interested in how to think about causes and effects should have this in their back pocket.",
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Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it. | f45c1b42902b9f89b3a1bd4e7e74de2f149c9fe8fe9abb406d6baf6aa1819dbb | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "\"Why Anything? Why This?\" by Derek Parfit. https://www.sfu.ca/\\~rpyke/cafe/parfit.pdf Also, \"What Is It Like To Be a Bat?\" by Thomas Nagel. https://www.sas.upenn.edu/\\~cavitch/pdf-library/Nagel\\_Bat.pdf",
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"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Ok but like what are you into?",
"role": "assistant"
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] | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "\"Why Anything? Why This?\" by Derek Parfit. https://www.sfu.ca/\\~rpyke/cafe/parfit.pdf Also, \"What Is It Like To Be a Bat?\" by Thomas Nagel. https://www.sas.upenn.edu/\\~cavitch/pdf-library/Nagel\\_Bat.pdf",
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Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it. | f45c1b42902b9f89b3a1bd4e7e74de2f149c9fe8fe9abb406d6baf6aa1819dbb | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Decolonization is not a Metaphor by Tuck and Yang https://jps.library.utoronto.ca/index.php/des/article/view/18630",
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{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Ok but like what are you into?",
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] | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Decolonization is not a Metaphor by Tuck and Yang https://jps.library.utoronto.ca/index.php/des/article/view/18630",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.192308 | 4.692308 | {
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Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it. | f45c1b42902b9f89b3a1bd4e7e74de2f149c9fe8fe9abb406d6baf6aa1819dbb | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Donna Harraway's \"The Cyborg Manifesto\".",
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}
] | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Ok but like what are you into?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Donna Harraway's \"The Cyborg Manifesto\".",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.192308 | 4.692308 | {
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"post_id": "kyhbkg",
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Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it. | f45c1b42902b9f89b3a1bd4e7e74de2f149c9fe8fe9abb406d6baf6aa1819dbb | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "The Hallmarks of Cancer: Cell81683-9)",
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}
] | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Ok but like what are you into?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Recommend a must read paper or scholarly article for the layman. What's a paper you read that you felt everyone in the world regardless of their academic background should read? Any field. Must be simple enough so that someone with only a general understanding can understand it.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "The Hallmarks of Cancer: Cell81683-9)",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.192308 | 4.692308 | {
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"post_id": "kyhbkg",
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"raw_score_rejected": 2,
"seconds_difference": 113429,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.96
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I have 2 kids. 2 and 5. It's hard. Really hard. It started off as an opportunity to spend more time with the kids, now it's just ruining my career.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I love my mornings when the house is quite. I sneak up early, makes a cup of coffee and usually gets 2 hours of uninterrupted work done before the house starts to rise. But - I crash into bed at 10PM at the latest. I wouldn’t function if I were up til after midnight (honestly - totally wrecked today after New Years!) I worked nights for many years which screwed everything up, today I am very happy for being tired early and getting to rise early.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I have 2 kids. 2 and 5. It's hard. Really hard. It started off as an opportunity to spend more time with the kids, now it's just ruining my career.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 10 | 7.434783 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
"raw_score_chosen": 82,
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"raw_score_rejected": 23,
"seconds_difference": 8593,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.96
} |
Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I'm struggling too. I've spent years trying to separate work from home and now it's like I've got a mental block against working at home.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I LOVE IT. Complete solitude and maximum productivity. No annoying colleagues bothering me or in-person meetings.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I'm struggling too. I've spent years trying to separate work from home and now it's like I've got a mental block against working at home.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 8.782051 | 7.674908 | {
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I'm struggling too. I've spent years trying to separate work from home and now it's like I've got a mental block against working at home.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I love my mornings when the house is quite. I sneak up early, makes a cup of coffee and usually gets 2 hours of uninterrupted work done before the house starts to rise. But - I crash into bed at 10PM at the latest. I wouldn’t function if I were up til after midnight (honestly - totally wrecked today after New Years!) I worked nights for many years which screwed everything up, today I am very happy for being tired early and getting to rise early.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I'm struggling too. I've spent years trying to separate work from home and now it's like I've got a mental block against working at home.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 8.782051 | 7.216834 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
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"seconds_difference": 10252,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I'm struggling too. I've spent years trying to separate work from home and now it's like I've got a mental block against working at home.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yep, but I usually write in coffee shops so I am used to tuning out noise",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I'm struggling too. I've spent years trying to separate work from home and now it's like I've got a mental block against working at home.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 8.782051 | 0 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
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"raw_score_rejected": 4,
"seconds_difference": 220,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.96
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I'm struggling too. I've spent years trying to separate work from home and now it's like I've got a mental block against working at home.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yes. Way more work actually.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I'm struggling too. I've spent years trying to separate work from home and now it's like I've got a mental block against working at home.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 8.782051 | 0 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
"raw_score_chosen": 59,
"raw_score_ratio": 11.8,
"raw_score_rejected": 5,
"seconds_difference": 934,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.96
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here are some tips, from someone who worked from home pre-pandemic and now works and does a PhD from home: 1. Take time to figure out your productivity windows and then schedule your day around that. It make take a few weeks, but as you go through the day take note of when you’re tired, when you’ve got physical energy, and when you’ve got mental energy. Do all your most demanding work when you’re high on mental energy, and save administrative and less intense tasks for when you hit a slump. When you have physical energy, get up and move! It helps you keep focus throughout the day. 2. DON’T push yourself to work at the times you know you won’t be productive. Can’t work in the evening? Don’t! Wake up earlier or take shorter breaks throughout the day instead. Save easy tasks, household chores, and activities to wind down for those times. 3. If you’re not getting anything done and can’t figure out why, track how your time is spent for a day or two. Then look at where your time went and, importantly, what you accomplished for that time. Spending an hour re-reading the same couple pages because you can’t focus is not the same as spending an hour clearing out your inbox—mail cleanup is actually achieving something. 4. Create a routine and stick to it for a week. Get up at the same time, have a rough idea what you’re going to work on/do/eat but leave flexibility for things that may pop up. Also actively plan how you’ll gear up for the day and relax for the night. At the end of the week—was it too much structure? Not enough? What worked and what didn’t? 5. Reassess your environment. What things about your home office make it hard for you to work? Bad lighting, uncomfortable seating, other people? On the flip side, what things about your pre-pandemic atmosphere made you more productive? Try to replicate what you can.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I LOVE IT. Complete solitude and maximum productivity. No annoying colleagues bothering me or in-person meetings.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here are some tips, from someone who worked from home pre-pandemic and now works and does a PhD from home: 1. Take time to figure out your productivity windows and then schedule your day around that. It make take a few weeks, but as you go through the day take note of when you’re tired, when you’ve got physical energy, and when you’ve got mental energy. Do all your most demanding work when you’re high on mental energy, and save administrative and less intense tasks for when you hit a slump. When you have physical energy, get up and move! It helps you keep focus throughout the day. 2. DON’T push yourself to work at the times you know you won’t be productive. Can’t work in the evening? Don’t! Wake up earlier or take shorter breaks throughout the day instead. Save easy tasks, household chores, and activities to wind down for those times. 3. If you’re not getting anything done and can’t figure out why, track how your time is spent for a day or two. Then look at where your time went and, importantly, what you accomplished for that time. Spending an hour re-reading the same couple pages because you can’t focus is not the same as spending an hour clearing out your inbox—mail cleanup is actually achieving something. 4. Create a routine and stick to it for a week. Get up at the same time, have a rough idea what you’re going to work on/do/eat but leave flexibility for things that may pop up. Also actively plan how you’ll gear up for the day and relax for the night. At the end of the week—was it too much structure? Not enough? What worked and what didn’t? 5. Reassess your environment. What things about your home office make it hard for you to work? Bad lighting, uncomfortable seating, other people? On the flip side, what things about your pre-pandemic atmosphere made you more productive? Try to replicate what you can.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 7.051282 | 6.908425 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
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"seconds_difference": 15996,
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here are some tips, from someone who worked from home pre-pandemic and now works and does a PhD from home: 1. Take time to figure out your productivity windows and then schedule your day around that. It make take a few weeks, but as you go through the day take note of when you’re tired, when you’ve got physical energy, and when you’ve got mental energy. Do all your most demanding work when you’re high on mental energy, and save administrative and less intense tasks for when you hit a slump. When you have physical energy, get up and move! It helps you keep focus throughout the day. 2. DON’T push yourself to work at the times you know you won’t be productive. Can’t work in the evening? Don’t! Wake up earlier or take shorter breaks throughout the day instead. Save easy tasks, household chores, and activities to wind down for those times. 3. If you’re not getting anything done and can’t figure out why, track how your time is spent for a day or two. Then look at where your time went and, importantly, what you accomplished for that time. Spending an hour re-reading the same couple pages because you can’t focus is not the same as spending an hour clearing out your inbox—mail cleanup is actually achieving something. 4. Create a routine and stick to it for a week. Get up at the same time, have a rough idea what you’re going to work on/do/eat but leave flexibility for things that may pop up. Also actively plan how you’ll gear up for the day and relax for the night. At the end of the week—was it too much structure? Not enough? What worked and what didn’t? 5. Reassess your environment. What things about your home office make it hard for you to work? Bad lighting, uncomfortable seating, other people? On the flip side, what things about your pre-pandemic atmosphere made you more productive? Try to replicate what you can.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I love my mornings when the house is quite. I sneak up early, makes a cup of coffee and usually gets 2 hours of uninterrupted work done before the house starts to rise. But - I crash into bed at 10PM at the latest. I wouldn’t function if I were up til after midnight (honestly - totally wrecked today after New Years!) I worked nights for many years which screwed everything up, today I am very happy for being tired early and getting to rise early.",
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"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here are some tips, from someone who worked from home pre-pandemic and now works and does a PhD from home: 1. Take time to figure out your productivity windows and then schedule your day around that. It make take a few weeks, but as you go through the day take note of when you’re tired, when you’ve got physical energy, and when you’ve got mental energy. Do all your most demanding work when you’re high on mental energy, and save administrative and less intense tasks for when you hit a slump. When you have physical energy, get up and move! It helps you keep focus throughout the day. 2. DON’T push yourself to work at the times you know you won’t be productive. Can’t work in the evening? Don’t! Wake up earlier or take shorter breaks throughout the day instead. Save easy tasks, household chores, and activities to wind down for those times. 3. If you’re not getting anything done and can’t figure out why, track how your time is spent for a day or two. Then look at where your time went and, importantly, what you accomplished for that time. Spending an hour re-reading the same couple pages because you can’t focus is not the same as spending an hour clearing out your inbox—mail cleanup is actually achieving something. 4. Create a routine and stick to it for a week. Get up at the same time, have a rough idea what you’re going to work on/do/eat but leave flexibility for things that may pop up. Also actively plan how you’ll gear up for the day and relax for the night. At the end of the week—was it too much structure? Not enough? What worked and what didn’t? 5. Reassess your environment. What things about your home office make it hard for you to work? Bad lighting, uncomfortable seating, other people? On the flip side, what things about your pre-pandemic atmosphere made you more productive? Try to replicate what you can.",
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here are some tips, from someone who worked from home pre-pandemic and now works and does a PhD from home: 1. Take time to figure out your productivity windows and then schedule your day around that. It make take a few weeks, but as you go through the day take note of when you’re tired, when you’ve got physical energy, and when you’ve got mental energy. Do all your most demanding work when you’re high on mental energy, and save administrative and less intense tasks for when you hit a slump. When you have physical energy, get up and move! It helps you keep focus throughout the day. 2. DON’T push yourself to work at the times you know you won’t be productive. Can’t work in the evening? Don’t! Wake up earlier or take shorter breaks throughout the day instead. Save easy tasks, household chores, and activities to wind down for those times. 3. If you’re not getting anything done and can’t figure out why, track how your time is spent for a day or two. Then look at where your time went and, importantly, what you accomplished for that time. Spending an hour re-reading the same couple pages because you can’t focus is not the same as spending an hour clearing out your inbox—mail cleanup is actually achieving something. 4. Create a routine and stick to it for a week. Get up at the same time, have a rough idea what you’re going to work on/do/eat but leave flexibility for things that may pop up. Also actively plan how you’ll gear up for the day and relax for the night. At the end of the week—was it too much structure? Not enough? What worked and what didn’t? 5. Reassess your environment. What things about your home office make it hard for you to work? Bad lighting, uncomfortable seating, other people? On the flip side, what things about your pre-pandemic atmosphere made you more productive? Try to replicate what you can.",
"role": "assistant"
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{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Have you ever played civ? Basically production slows down in the game when your empire is at war and it becomes impossible to built anything, and science research also lags. I guess what I'm saying is I feel like my productivity is at a grinding halt because the empire is failing. Or something. I'm getting the basics done but not as much beyond that as I'd like to",
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{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here are some tips, from someone who worked from home pre-pandemic and now works and does a PhD from home: 1. Take time to figure out your productivity windows and then schedule your day around that. It make take a few weeks, but as you go through the day take note of when you’re tired, when you’ve got physical energy, and when you’ve got mental energy. Do all your most demanding work when you’re high on mental energy, and save administrative and less intense tasks for when you hit a slump. When you have physical energy, get up and move! It helps you keep focus throughout the day. 2. DON’T push yourself to work at the times you know you won’t be productive. Can’t work in the evening? Don’t! Wake up earlier or take shorter breaks throughout the day instead. Save easy tasks, household chores, and activities to wind down for those times. 3. If you’re not getting anything done and can’t figure out why, track how your time is spent for a day or two. Then look at where your time went and, importantly, what you accomplished for that time. Spending an hour re-reading the same couple pages because you can’t focus is not the same as spending an hour clearing out your inbox—mail cleanup is actually achieving something. 4. Create a routine and stick to it for a week. Get up at the same time, have a rough idea what you’re going to work on/do/eat but leave flexibility for things that may pop up. Also actively plan how you’ll gear up for the day and relax for the night. At the end of the week—was it too much structure? Not enough? What worked and what didn’t? 5. Reassess your environment. What things about your home office make it hard for you to work? Bad lighting, uncomfortable seating, other people? On the flip side, what things about your pre-pandemic atmosphere made you more productive? Try to replicate what you can.",
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here are some tips, from someone who worked from home pre-pandemic and now works and does a PhD from home: 1. Take time to figure out your productivity windows and then schedule your day around that. It make take a few weeks, but as you go through the day take note of when you’re tired, when you’ve got physical energy, and when you’ve got mental energy. Do all your most demanding work when you’re high on mental energy, and save administrative and less intense tasks for when you hit a slump. When you have physical energy, get up and move! It helps you keep focus throughout the day. 2. DON’T push yourself to work at the times you know you won’t be productive. Can’t work in the evening? Don’t! Wake up earlier or take shorter breaks throughout the day instead. Save easy tasks, household chores, and activities to wind down for those times. 3. If you’re not getting anything done and can’t figure out why, track how your time is spent for a day or two. Then look at where your time went and, importantly, what you accomplished for that time. Spending an hour re-reading the same couple pages because you can’t focus is not the same as spending an hour clearing out your inbox—mail cleanup is actually achieving something. 4. Create a routine and stick to it for a week. Get up at the same time, have a rough idea what you’re going to work on/do/eat but leave flexibility for things that may pop up. Also actively plan how you’ll gear up for the day and relax for the night. At the end of the week—was it too much structure? Not enough? What worked and what didn’t? 5. Reassess your environment. What things about your home office make it hard for you to work? Bad lighting, uncomfortable seating, other people? On the flip side, what things about your pre-pandemic atmosphere made you more productive? Try to replicate what you can.",
"role": "assistant"
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{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yes, it is a huge problem. My kid is in my home office right now, so I can only work after they go down.",
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{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here are some tips, from someone who worked from home pre-pandemic and now works and does a PhD from home: 1. Take time to figure out your productivity windows and then schedule your day around that. It make take a few weeks, but as you go through the day take note of when you’re tired, when you’ve got physical energy, and when you’ve got mental energy. Do all your most demanding work when you’re high on mental energy, and save administrative and less intense tasks for when you hit a slump. When you have physical energy, get up and move! It helps you keep focus throughout the day. 2. DON’T push yourself to work at the times you know you won’t be productive. Can’t work in the evening? Don’t! Wake up earlier or take shorter breaks throughout the day instead. Save easy tasks, household chores, and activities to wind down for those times. 3. If you’re not getting anything done and can’t figure out why, track how your time is spent for a day or two. Then look at where your time went and, importantly, what you accomplished for that time. Spending an hour re-reading the same couple pages because you can’t focus is not the same as spending an hour clearing out your inbox—mail cleanup is actually achieving something. 4. Create a routine and stick to it for a week. Get up at the same time, have a rough idea what you’re going to work on/do/eat but leave flexibility for things that may pop up. Also actively plan how you’ll gear up for the day and relax for the night. At the end of the week—was it too much structure? Not enough? What worked and what didn’t? 5. Reassess your environment. What things about your home office make it hard for you to work? Bad lighting, uncomfortable seating, other people? On the flip side, what things about your pre-pandemic atmosphere made you more productive? Try to replicate what you can.",
"role": "assistant"
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here are some tips, from someone who worked from home pre-pandemic and now works and does a PhD from home: 1. Take time to figure out your productivity windows and then schedule your day around that. It make take a few weeks, but as you go through the day take note of when you’re tired, when you’ve got physical energy, and when you’ve got mental energy. Do all your most demanding work when you’re high on mental energy, and save administrative and less intense tasks for when you hit a slump. When you have physical energy, get up and move! It helps you keep focus throughout the day. 2. DON’T push yourself to work at the times you know you won’t be productive. Can’t work in the evening? Don’t! Wake up earlier or take shorter breaks throughout the day instead. Save easy tasks, household chores, and activities to wind down for those times. 3. If you’re not getting anything done and can’t figure out why, track how your time is spent for a day or two. Then look at where your time went and, importantly, what you accomplished for that time. Spending an hour re-reading the same couple pages because you can’t focus is not the same as spending an hour clearing out your inbox—mail cleanup is actually achieving something. 4. Create a routine and stick to it for a week. Get up at the same time, have a rough idea what you’re going to work on/do/eat but leave flexibility for things that may pop up. Also actively plan how you’ll gear up for the day and relax for the night. At the end of the week—was it too much structure? Not enough? What worked and what didn’t? 5. Reassess your environment. What things about your home office make it hard for you to work? Bad lighting, uncomfortable seating, other people? On the flip side, what things about your pre-pandemic atmosphere made you more productive? Try to replicate what you can.",
"role": "assistant"
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{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
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"content": "I’ve not been as productive at home, no. I’ve never been able to work at home—too much going on with roommates and so many distractions. I also just think physically going to a separate location helps get me into the mindset to work. If my bed is within walking distance, good luck lol",
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{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here are some tips, from someone who worked from home pre-pandemic and now works and does a PhD from home: 1. Take time to figure out your productivity windows and then schedule your day around that. It make take a few weeks, but as you go through the day take note of when you’re tired, when you’ve got physical energy, and when you’ve got mental energy. Do all your most demanding work when you’re high on mental energy, and save administrative and less intense tasks for when you hit a slump. When you have physical energy, get up and move! It helps you keep focus throughout the day. 2. DON’T push yourself to work at the times you know you won’t be productive. Can’t work in the evening? Don’t! Wake up earlier or take shorter breaks throughout the day instead. Save easy tasks, household chores, and activities to wind down for those times. 3. If you’re not getting anything done and can’t figure out why, track how your time is spent for a day or two. Then look at where your time went and, importantly, what you accomplished for that time. Spending an hour re-reading the same couple pages because you can’t focus is not the same as spending an hour clearing out your inbox—mail cleanup is actually achieving something. 4. Create a routine and stick to it for a week. Get up at the same time, have a rough idea what you’re going to work on/do/eat but leave flexibility for things that may pop up. Also actively plan how you’ll gear up for the day and relax for the night. At the end of the week—was it too much structure? Not enough? What worked and what didn’t? 5. Reassess your environment. What things about your home office make it hard for you to work? Bad lighting, uncomfortable seating, other people? On the flip side, what things about your pre-pandemic atmosphere made you more productive? Try to replicate what you can.",
"role": "assistant"
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here are some tips, from someone who worked from home pre-pandemic and now works and does a PhD from home: 1. Take time to figure out your productivity windows and then schedule your day around that. It make take a few weeks, but as you go through the day take note of when you’re tired, when you’ve got physical energy, and when you’ve got mental energy. Do all your most demanding work when you’re high on mental energy, and save administrative and less intense tasks for when you hit a slump. When you have physical energy, get up and move! It helps you keep focus throughout the day. 2. DON’T push yourself to work at the times you know you won’t be productive. Can’t work in the evening? Don’t! Wake up earlier or take shorter breaks throughout the day instead. Save easy tasks, household chores, and activities to wind down for those times. 3. If you’re not getting anything done and can’t figure out why, track how your time is spent for a day or two. Then look at where your time went and, importantly, what you accomplished for that time. Spending an hour re-reading the same couple pages because you can’t focus is not the same as spending an hour clearing out your inbox—mail cleanup is actually achieving something. 4. Create a routine and stick to it for a week. Get up at the same time, have a rough idea what you’re going to work on/do/eat but leave flexibility for things that may pop up. Also actively plan how you’ll gear up for the day and relax for the night. At the end of the week—was it too much structure? Not enough? What worked and what didn’t? 5. Reassess your environment. What things about your home office make it hard for you to work? Bad lighting, uncomfortable seating, other people? On the flip side, what things about your pre-pandemic atmosphere made you more productive? Try to replicate what you can.",
"role": "assistant"
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{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
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"content": "Lol Nope !! I have tried to move some machines home and try and get some work done, but it's like bringing the work stress home !! Which I don't like. I can work overnight at the lab with no issues, but at home I loose all motivation to do research. So I try to work at the lab as much as possible. Having said that I know guys who don't GAF where they are working. Truly incredible people imo.",
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{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here are some tips, from someone who worked from home pre-pandemic and now works and does a PhD from home: 1. Take time to figure out your productivity windows and then schedule your day around that. It make take a few weeks, but as you go through the day take note of when you’re tired, when you’ve got physical energy, and when you’ve got mental energy. Do all your most demanding work when you’re high on mental energy, and save administrative and less intense tasks for when you hit a slump. When you have physical energy, get up and move! It helps you keep focus throughout the day. 2. DON’T push yourself to work at the times you know you won’t be productive. Can’t work in the evening? Don’t! Wake up earlier or take shorter breaks throughout the day instead. Save easy tasks, household chores, and activities to wind down for those times. 3. If you’re not getting anything done and can’t figure out why, track how your time is spent for a day or two. Then look at where your time went and, importantly, what you accomplished for that time. Spending an hour re-reading the same couple pages because you can’t focus is not the same as spending an hour clearing out your inbox—mail cleanup is actually achieving something. 4. Create a routine and stick to it for a week. Get up at the same time, have a rough idea what you’re going to work on/do/eat but leave flexibility for things that may pop up. Also actively plan how you’ll gear up for the day and relax for the night. At the end of the week—was it too much structure? Not enough? What worked and what didn’t? 5. Reassess your environment. What things about your home office make it hard for you to work? Bad lighting, uncomfortable seating, other people? On the flip side, what things about your pre-pandemic atmosphere made you more productive? Try to replicate what you can.",
"role": "assistant"
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] | 7.051282 | 4.051282 | {
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here are some tips, from someone who worked from home pre-pandemic and now works and does a PhD from home: 1. Take time to figure out your productivity windows and then schedule your day around that. It make take a few weeks, but as you go through the day take note of when you’re tired, when you’ve got physical energy, and when you’ve got mental energy. Do all your most demanding work when you’re high on mental energy, and save administrative and less intense tasks for when you hit a slump. When you have physical energy, get up and move! It helps you keep focus throughout the day. 2. DON’T push yourself to work at the times you know you won’t be productive. Can’t work in the evening? Don’t! Wake up earlier or take shorter breaks throughout the day instead. Save easy tasks, household chores, and activities to wind down for those times. 3. If you’re not getting anything done and can’t figure out why, track how your time is spent for a day or two. Then look at where your time went and, importantly, what you accomplished for that time. Spending an hour re-reading the same couple pages because you can’t focus is not the same as spending an hour clearing out your inbox—mail cleanup is actually achieving something. 4. Create a routine and stick to it for a week. Get up at the same time, have a rough idea what you’re going to work on/do/eat but leave flexibility for things that may pop up. Also actively plan how you’ll gear up for the day and relax for the night. At the end of the week—was it too much structure? Not enough? What worked and what didn’t? 5. Reassess your environment. What things about your home office make it hard for you to work? Bad lighting, uncomfortable seating, other people? On the flip side, what things about your pre-pandemic atmosphere made you more productive? Try to replicate what you can.",
"role": "assistant"
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{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
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"content": "Yep, but I usually write in coffee shops so I am used to tuning out noise",
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{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here are some tips, from someone who worked from home pre-pandemic and now works and does a PhD from home: 1. Take time to figure out your productivity windows and then schedule your day around that. It make take a few weeks, but as you go through the day take note of when you’re tired, when you’ve got physical energy, and when you’ve got mental energy. Do all your most demanding work when you’re high on mental energy, and save administrative and less intense tasks for when you hit a slump. When you have physical energy, get up and move! It helps you keep focus throughout the day. 2. DON’T push yourself to work at the times you know you won’t be productive. Can’t work in the evening? Don’t! Wake up earlier or take shorter breaks throughout the day instead. Save easy tasks, household chores, and activities to wind down for those times. 3. If you’re not getting anything done and can’t figure out why, track how your time is spent for a day or two. Then look at where your time went and, importantly, what you accomplished for that time. Spending an hour re-reading the same couple pages because you can’t focus is not the same as spending an hour clearing out your inbox—mail cleanup is actually achieving something. 4. Create a routine and stick to it for a week. Get up at the same time, have a rough idea what you’re going to work on/do/eat but leave flexibility for things that may pop up. Also actively plan how you’ll gear up for the day and relax for the night. At the end of the week—was it too much structure? Not enough? What worked and what didn’t? 5. Reassess your environment. What things about your home office make it hard for you to work? Bad lighting, uncomfortable seating, other people? On the flip side, what things about your pre-pandemic atmosphere made you more productive? Try to replicate what you can.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 7.051282 | 0.051282 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here are some tips, from someone who worked from home pre-pandemic and now works and does a PhD from home: 1. Take time to figure out your productivity windows and then schedule your day around that. It make take a few weeks, but as you go through the day take note of when you’re tired, when you’ve got physical energy, and when you’ve got mental energy. Do all your most demanding work when you’re high on mental energy, and save administrative and less intense tasks for when you hit a slump. When you have physical energy, get up and move! It helps you keep focus throughout the day. 2. DON’T push yourself to work at the times you know you won’t be productive. Can’t work in the evening? Don’t! Wake up earlier or take shorter breaks throughout the day instead. Save easy tasks, household chores, and activities to wind down for those times. 3. If you’re not getting anything done and can’t figure out why, track how your time is spent for a day or two. Then look at where your time went and, importantly, what you accomplished for that time. Spending an hour re-reading the same couple pages because you can’t focus is not the same as spending an hour clearing out your inbox—mail cleanup is actually achieving something. 4. Create a routine and stick to it for a week. Get up at the same time, have a rough idea what you’re going to work on/do/eat but leave flexibility for things that may pop up. Also actively plan how you’ll gear up for the day and relax for the night. At the end of the week—was it too much structure? Not enough? What worked and what didn’t? 5. Reassess your environment. What things about your home office make it hard for you to work? Bad lighting, uncomfortable seating, other people? On the flip side, what things about your pre-pandemic atmosphere made you more productive? Try to replicate what you can.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yes. Way more work actually.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here are some tips, from someone who worked from home pre-pandemic and now works and does a PhD from home: 1. Take time to figure out your productivity windows and then schedule your day around that. It make take a few weeks, but as you go through the day take note of when you’re tired, when you’ve got physical energy, and when you’ve got mental energy. Do all your most demanding work when you’re high on mental energy, and save administrative and less intense tasks for when you hit a slump. When you have physical energy, get up and move! It helps you keep focus throughout the day. 2. DON’T push yourself to work at the times you know you won’t be productive. Can’t work in the evening? Don’t! Wake up earlier or take shorter breaks throughout the day instead. Save easy tasks, household chores, and activities to wind down for those times. 3. If you’re not getting anything done and can’t figure out why, track how your time is spent for a day or two. Then look at where your time went and, importantly, what you accomplished for that time. Spending an hour re-reading the same couple pages because you can’t focus is not the same as spending an hour clearing out your inbox—mail cleanup is actually achieving something. 4. Create a routine and stick to it for a week. Get up at the same time, have a rough idea what you’re going to work on/do/eat but leave flexibility for things that may pop up. Also actively plan how you’ll gear up for the day and relax for the night. At the end of the week—was it too much structure? Not enough? What worked and what didn’t? 5. Reassess your environment. What things about your home office make it hard for you to work? Bad lighting, uncomfortable seating, other people? On the flip side, what things about your pre-pandemic atmosphere made you more productive? Try to replicate what you can.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 7.051282 | 1.651282 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here are some tips, from someone who worked from home pre-pandemic and now works and does a PhD from home: 1. Take time to figure out your productivity windows and then schedule your day around that. It make take a few weeks, but as you go through the day take note of when you’re tired, when you’ve got physical energy, and when you’ve got mental energy. Do all your most demanding work when you’re high on mental energy, and save administrative and less intense tasks for when you hit a slump. When you have physical energy, get up and move! It helps you keep focus throughout the day. 2. DON’T push yourself to work at the times you know you won’t be productive. Can’t work in the evening? Don’t! Wake up earlier or take shorter breaks throughout the day instead. Save easy tasks, household chores, and activities to wind down for those times. 3. If you’re not getting anything done and can’t figure out why, track how your time is spent for a day or two. Then look at where your time went and, importantly, what you accomplished for that time. Spending an hour re-reading the same couple pages because you can’t focus is not the same as spending an hour clearing out your inbox—mail cleanup is actually achieving something. 4. Create a routine and stick to it for a week. Get up at the same time, have a rough idea what you’re going to work on/do/eat but leave flexibility for things that may pop up. Also actively plan how you’ll gear up for the day and relax for the night. At the end of the week—was it too much structure? Not enough? What worked and what didn’t? 5. Reassess your environment. What things about your home office make it hard for you to work? Bad lighting, uncomfortable seating, other people? On the flip side, what things about your pre-pandemic atmosphere made you more productive? Try to replicate what you can.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "It has taken a few months but I have managed to convince to fam to leave me alone when I’m at my desk. Doesn’t always stick. I’m definitely more productive on those days I can get back to the uni. No one there. Very quiet. Good luck to you.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here are some tips, from someone who worked from home pre-pandemic and now works and does a PhD from home: 1. Take time to figure out your productivity windows and then schedule your day around that. It make take a few weeks, but as you go through the day take note of when you’re tired, when you’ve got physical energy, and when you’ve got mental energy. Do all your most demanding work when you’re high on mental energy, and save administrative and less intense tasks for when you hit a slump. When you have physical energy, get up and move! It helps you keep focus throughout the day. 2. DON’T push yourself to work at the times you know you won’t be productive. Can’t work in the evening? Don’t! Wake up earlier or take shorter breaks throughout the day instead. Save easy tasks, household chores, and activities to wind down for those times. 3. If you’re not getting anything done and can’t figure out why, track how your time is spent for a day or two. Then look at where your time went and, importantly, what you accomplished for that time. Spending an hour re-reading the same couple pages because you can’t focus is not the same as spending an hour clearing out your inbox—mail cleanup is actually achieving something. 4. Create a routine and stick to it for a week. Get up at the same time, have a rough idea what you’re going to work on/do/eat but leave flexibility for things that may pop up. Also actively plan how you’ll gear up for the day and relax for the night. At the end of the week—was it too much structure? Not enough? What worked and what didn’t? 5. Reassess your environment. What things about your home office make it hard for you to work? Bad lighting, uncomfortable seating, other people? On the flip side, what things about your pre-pandemic atmosphere made you more productive? Try to replicate what you can.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 7.051282 | 1.651282 | {
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I LOVE IT. Complete solitude and maximum productivity. No annoying colleagues bothering me or in-person meetings.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I love my mornings when the house is quite. I sneak up early, makes a cup of coffee and usually gets 2 hours of uninterrupted work done before the house starts to rise. But - I crash into bed at 10PM at the latest. I wouldn’t function if I were up til after midnight (honestly - totally wrecked today after New Years!) I worked nights for many years which screwed everything up, today I am very happy for being tired early and getting to rise early.",
"role": "assistant"
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{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I LOVE IT. Complete solitude and maximum productivity. No annoying colleagues bothering me or in-person meetings.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 6.794872 | 6.57748 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Have you ever played civ? Basically production slows down in the game when your empire is at war and it becomes impossible to built anything, and science research also lags. I guess what I'm saying is I feel like my productivity is at a grinding halt because the empire is failing. Or something. I'm getting the basics done but not as much beyond that as I'd like to",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yep, but I usually write in coffee shops so I am used to tuning out noise",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Have you ever played civ? Basically production slows down in the game when your empire is at war and it becomes impossible to built anything, and science research also lags. I guess what I'm saying is I feel like my productivity is at a grinding halt because the empire is failing. Or something. I'm getting the basics done but not as much beyond that as I'd like to",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 6.153846 | 2.653846 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
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"raw_score_ratio": 4.5,
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"seconds_difference": 3521,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.96
} |
Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Have you ever played civ? Basically production slows down in the game when your empire is at war and it becomes impossible to built anything, and science research also lags. I guess what I'm saying is I feel like my productivity is at a grinding halt because the empire is failing. Or something. I'm getting the basics done but not as much beyond that as I'd like to",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yes. Way more work actually.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Have you ever played civ? Basically production slows down in the game when your empire is at war and it becomes impossible to built anything, and science research also lags. I guess what I'm saying is I feel like my productivity is at a grinding halt because the empire is failing. Or something. I'm getting the basics done but not as much beyond that as I'd like to",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 6.153846 | 3.553846 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
"raw_score_chosen": 18,
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"raw_score_rejected": 5,
"seconds_difference": 4235,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.96
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yes, it is a huge problem. My kid is in my home office right now, so I can only work after they go down.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yep, but I usually write in coffee shops so I am used to tuning out noise",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yes, it is a huge problem. My kid is in my home office right now, so I can only work after they go down.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.641026 | 4.141026 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yes, it is a huge problem. My kid is in my home office right now, so I can only work after they go down.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yes. Way more work actually.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yes, it is a huge problem. My kid is in my home office right now, so I can only work after they go down.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.641026 | 4.641026 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Lol Nope !! I have tried to move some machines home and try and get some work done, but it's like bringing the work stress home !! Which I don't like. I can work overnight at the lab with no issues, but at home I loose all motivation to do research. So I try to work at the lab as much as possible. Having said that I know guys who don't GAF where they are working. Truly incredible people imo.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I’ve not been as productive at home, no. I’ve never been able to work at home—too much going on with roommates and so many distractions. I also just think physically going to a separate location helps get me into the mindset to work. If my bed is within walking distance, good luck lol",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Lol Nope !! I have tried to move some machines home and try and get some work done, but it's like bringing the work stress home !! Which I don't like. I can work overnight at the lab with no issues, but at home I loose all motivation to do research. So I try to work at the lab as much as possible. Having said that I know guys who don't GAF where they are working. Truly incredible people imo.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.512821 | 5.369963 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I’ve not been as productive at home, no. I’ve never been able to work at home—too much going on with roommates and so many distractions. I also just think physically going to a separate location helps get me into the mindset to work. If my bed is within walking distance, good luck lol",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yep, but I usually write in coffee shops so I am used to tuning out noise",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I’ve not been as productive at home, no. I’ve never been able to work at home—too much going on with roommates and so many distractions. I also just think physically going to a separate location helps get me into the mindset to work. If my bed is within walking distance, good luck lol",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.448718 | 4.698718 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
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"seconds_difference": 6717,
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I’ve not been as productive at home, no. I’ve never been able to work at home—too much going on with roommates and so many distractions. I also just think physically going to a separate location helps get me into the mindset to work. If my bed is within walking distance, good luck lol",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yes. Way more work actually.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I’ve not been as productive at home, no. I’ve never been able to work at home—too much going on with roommates and so many distractions. I also just think physically going to a separate location helps get me into the mindset to work. If my bed is within walking distance, good luck lol",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.448718 | 5.048718 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Lol Nope !! I have tried to move some machines home and try and get some work done, but it's like bringing the work stress home !! Which I don't like. I can work overnight at the lab with no issues, but at home I loose all motivation to do research. So I try to work at the lab as much as possible. Having said that I know guys who don't GAF where they are working. Truly incredible people imo.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yep, but I usually write in coffee shops so I am used to tuning out noise",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Lol Nope !! I have tried to move some machines home and try and get some work done, but it's like bringing the work stress home !! Which I don't like. I can work overnight at the lab with no issues, but at home I loose all motivation to do research. So I try to work at the lab as much as possible. Having said that I know guys who don't GAF where they are working. Truly incredible people imo.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.512821 | 4.512821 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
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"raw_score_ratio": 2,
"raw_score_rejected": 4,
"seconds_difference": 8521,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.96
} |
Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Lol Nope !! I have tried to move some machines home and try and get some work done, but it's like bringing the work stress home !! Which I don't like. I can work overnight at the lab with no issues, but at home I loose all motivation to do research. So I try to work at the lab as much as possible. Having said that I know guys who don't GAF where they are working. Truly incredible people imo.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yes. Way more work actually.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Lol Nope !! I have tried to move some machines home and try and get some work done, but it's like bringing the work stress home !! Which I don't like. I can work overnight at the lab with no issues, but at home I loose all motivation to do research. So I try to work at the lab as much as possible. Having said that I know guys who don't GAF where they are working. Truly incredible people imo.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.512821 | 4.912821 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
"raw_score_chosen": 8,
"raw_score_ratio": 1.6,
"raw_score_rejected": 5,
"seconds_difference": 9235,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.96
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I can't accomplish anything at home besides emailing people and other administrative tasks. Fortunately, I am able to go to lab 4 days a week, otherwise I would probably get fired 🤣",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yep, but I usually write in coffee shops so I am used to tuning out noise",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I can't accomplish anything at home besides emailing people and other administrative tasks. Fortunately, I am able to go to lab 4 days a week, otherwise I would probably get fired 🤣",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.320513 | 5.070513 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
"raw_score_chosen": 5,
"raw_score_ratio": 1.25,
"raw_score_rejected": 4,
"seconds_difference": 29955,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.96
} |
Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "The answer is strongly dependent on whether or not you have kids. I don't, and I'm working just fine, but I can see how WFH would be a disaster with young kids running around.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yep, but I usually write in coffee shops so I am used to tuning out noise",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "The answer is strongly dependent on whether or not you have kids. I don't, and I'm working just fine, but I can see how WFH would be a disaster with young kids running around.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.384615 | 4.884615 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
"raw_score_chosen": 6,
"raw_score_ratio": 1.5,
"raw_score_rejected": 4,
"seconds_difference": 62504,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.96
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "It has taken a few months but I have managed to convince to fam to leave me alone when I’m at my desk. Doesn’t always stick. I’m definitely more productive on those days I can get back to the uni. No one there. Very quiet. Good luck to you.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yep, but I usually write in coffee shops so I am used to tuning out noise",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "It has taken a few months but I have managed to convince to fam to leave me alone when I’m at my desk. Doesn’t always stick. I’m definitely more productive on those days I can get back to the uni. No one there. Very quiet. Good luck to you.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.320513 | 5.070513 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
"raw_score_chosen": 5,
"raw_score_ratio": 1.25,
"raw_score_rejected": 4,
"seconds_difference": 9820,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.96
} |
Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "The answer is strongly dependent on whether or not you have kids. I don't, and I'm working just fine, but I can see how WFH would be a disaster with young kids running around.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I can't accomplish anything at home besides emailing people and other administrative tasks. Fortunately, I am able to go to lab 4 days a week, otherwise I would probably get fired 🤣",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "The answer is strongly dependent on whether or not you have kids. I don't, and I'm working just fine, but I can see how WFH would be a disaster with young kids running around.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.384615 | 5.184615 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
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"raw_score_rejected": 5,
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"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "The answer is strongly dependent on whether or not you have kids. I don't, and I'm working just fine, but I can see how WFH would be a disaster with young kids running around.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I told a fellow PhD student that \"I can't write my thesis at home. I need a separation of work and home\", in January. Since 2020 screws with us all, I had the delight of writing my thesis until June from home. Luckily all I had left was data processing, analysis, and writing up. My sleep schedule are shot to hell. My spouse still works in an essential job I would wake up, make our breakfast, eat it, then I sleep again until 10, which then I start working until lunch, then continue until I have to make dinner. After dinner, I continue working until like 1-2 am. I'm a night owl if there's no separation. I managed to finish it anyway. We still haven't had children yet, which makes it a bit easier (though where we are, childcare centres didn't close and we actually weren't hit badly \\[Australia\\]). I recently found that I can't work much with a laptop anymore (work from home setup). Laptop monitors are too small and they give me neck pain. I need comfortable monitors and an office.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "The answer is strongly dependent on whether or not you have kids. I don't, and I'm working just fine, but I can see how WFH would be a disaster with young kids running around.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.384615 | 4.884615 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
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} |
Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I told a fellow PhD student that \"I can't write my thesis at home. I need a separation of work and home\", in January. Since 2020 screws with us all, I had the delight of writing my thesis until June from home. Luckily all I had left was data processing, analysis, and writing up. My sleep schedule are shot to hell. My spouse still works in an essential job I would wake up, make our breakfast, eat it, then I sleep again until 10, which then I start working until lunch, then continue until I have to make dinner. After dinner, I continue working until like 1-2 am. I'm a night owl if there's no separation. I managed to finish it anyway. We still haven't had children yet, which makes it a bit easier (though where we are, childcare centres didn't close and we actually weren't hit badly \\[Australia\\]). I recently found that I can't work much with a laptop anymore (work from home setup). Laptop monitors are too small and they give me neck pain. I need comfortable monitors and an office.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Some stuff is way easier and quicker, other stuff, especially if meetings are involved generally take longer. I'm lucky because my team are fantastic and do their jobs without me having to check up on them, though. What other people said about scheduling tasks is super important. I regularly get about 75% of my work for the day done in the first 2 hours, partly because this is my more productive time and also because I try to start at 8 which gives me a clear window before other people start bugging me. Take breaks. Keep a to-do list. Break your list down to super manageable tasks. Seriously, break every single task down to little bits you can do in 15-20 minutes. If Pomodoros work for you, do those.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I told a fellow PhD student that \"I can't write my thesis at home. I need a separation of work and home\", in January. Since 2020 screws with us all, I had the delight of writing my thesis until June from home. Luckily all I had left was data processing, analysis, and writing up. My sleep schedule are shot to hell. My spouse still works in an essential job I would wake up, make our breakfast, eat it, then I sleep again until 10, which then I start working until lunch, then continue until I have to make dinner. After dinner, I continue working until like 1-2 am. I'm a night owl if there's no separation. I managed to finish it anyway. We still haven't had children yet, which makes it a bit easier (though where we are, childcare centres didn't close and we actually weren't hit badly \\[Australia\\]). I recently found that I can't work much with a laptop anymore (work from home setup). Laptop monitors are too small and they give me neck pain. I need comfortable monitors and an office.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.25641 | 4.923077 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
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Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "The answer is strongly dependent on whether or not you have kids. I don't, and I'm working just fine, but I can see how WFH would be a disaster with young kids running around.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Yes. Way more work actually.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "The answer is strongly dependent on whether or not you have kids. I don't, and I'm working just fine, but I can see how WFH would be a disaster with young kids running around.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.384615 | 5.184615 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
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"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.96
} |
Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "The answer is strongly dependent on whether or not you have kids. I don't, and I'm working just fine, but I can see how WFH would be a disaster with young kids running around.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "It has taken a few months but I have managed to convince to fam to leave me alone when I’m at my desk. Doesn’t always stick. I’m definitely more productive on those days I can get back to the uni. No one there. Very quiet. Good luck to you.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "The answer is strongly dependent on whether or not you have kids. I don't, and I'm working just fine, but I can see how WFH would be a disaster with young kids running around.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.384615 | 5.184615 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
"raw_score_chosen": 6,
"raw_score_ratio": 1.2,
"raw_score_rejected": 5,
"seconds_difference": 52684,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.96
} |
Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "The answer is strongly dependent on whether or not you have kids. I don't, and I'm working just fine, but I can see how WFH would be a disaster with young kids running around.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Some stuff is way easier and quicker, other stuff, especially if meetings are involved generally take longer. I'm lucky because my team are fantastic and do their jobs without me having to check up on them, though. What other people said about scheduling tasks is super important. I regularly get about 75% of my work for the day done in the first 2 hours, partly because this is my more productive time and also because I try to start at 8 which gives me a clear window before other people start bugging me. Take breaks. Keep a to-do list. Break your list down to super manageable tasks. Seriously, break every single task down to little bits you can do in 15-20 minutes. If Pomodoros work for you, do those.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "The answer is strongly dependent on whether or not you have kids. I don't, and I'm working just fine, but I can see how WFH would be a disaster with young kids running around.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.384615 | 4.384615 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
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"raw_score_rejected": 3,
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"upvote_ratio": 0.96
} |
Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "The answer is strongly dependent on whether or not you have kids. I don't, and I'm working just fine, but I can see how WFH would be a disaster with young kids running around.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I feel like a lot of adults are now finally realizing they may have some ADD related issues. I really need the structure and environment of an office and coworkers in order to be productive. And only with this pandemic am I realizing just how much my mind is like a dog chasing squirrels all day if given the chance.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "The answer is strongly dependent on whether or not you have kids. I don't, and I'm working just fine, but I can see how WFH would be a disaster with young kids running around.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.384615 | 4.384615 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
"raw_score_chosen": 6,
"raw_score_ratio": 2,
"raw_score_rejected": 3,
"seconds_difference": 9916,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.96
} |
Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "The answer is strongly dependent on whether or not you have kids. I don't, and I'm working just fine, but I can see how WFH would be a disaster with young kids running around.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "It’s been really rough. I spend 4 hours studying (Ph.D) alongside whatever hours I work (Grad TA) per day. In office/lab I could work 10 hours easily!",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "The answer is strongly dependent on whether or not you have kids. I don't, and I'm working just fine, but I can see how WFH would be a disaster with young kids running around.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.384615 | 3.384615 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
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"raw_score_rejected": 2,
"seconds_difference": 13292,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.96
} |
Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I feel like a lot of adults are now finally realizing they may have some ADD related issues. I really need the structure and environment of an office and coworkers in order to be productive. And only with this pandemic am I realizing just how much my mind is like a dog chasing squirrels all day if given the chance.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "It’s been really rough. I spend 4 hours studying (Ph.D) alongside whatever hours I work (Grad TA) per day. In office/lab I could work 10 hours easily!",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I feel like a lot of adults are now finally realizing they may have some ADD related issues. I really need the structure and environment of an office and coworkers in order to be productive. And only with this pandemic am I realizing just how much my mind is like a dog chasing squirrels all day if given the chance.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.192308 | 4.692308 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
"raw_score_chosen": 3,
"raw_score_ratio": 1.5,
"raw_score_rejected": 2,
"seconds_difference": 3376,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.96
} |
Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted. | a1e7437ce9e307917f6f9757a3c47928df5e277873ce6efb75a2bb37f7bad30c | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Me too. Two Boys 18 and 3. There is a survey that concluded mothers (I think here in Brazil) having their careers destroyed due to the pandemic.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "It’s been really rough. I spend 4 hours studying (Ph.D) alongside whatever hours I work (Grad TA) per day. In office/lab I could work 10 hours easily!",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Can Anyone Get ANY Work Done from Home? Sorry for this rant post, but I can't possibly the only one who can't get any work done from home. I feel like the only way anything is going to get done is if I start waking up at 4am, but I normally don't go to sleep until 1AM or later, so I'm not going to be in a good mood. I can rarely get work done in the evenings, because I'm just exhausted.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Me too. Two Boys 18 and 3. There is a survey that concluded mothers (I think here in Brazil) having their careers destroyed due to the pandemic.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.192308 | 4.692308 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "kodn1n",
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"seconds_difference": 17259,
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "While I was an (older, vet on GI Bill) undergrad my mentor asked if I could pick a next step of my choosing what would it be. This was at a Ivy-adjacent university. I responded with \"easy, masters in public history, park ranger at historical site\". \"Why don't you do that?\" \"Because I want more than $40k to live on a year.\" \"Well your parents would help out with expenses, right?\" And right about then I realized my life experiences were very different from theirs. I knew this before hand, but it was a stern reminder. If you want to be wealthy as a humanities academic, it helps a lot to be born into money.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I suppose it depends what you mean by wealthy. There are a reasonable number of social science academics with 200k+ salaries which is nearly 4x the median annual income of Americans. So, assuming good savings and investment to turn income into wealth -- pretty wealthy compared to the average American. (Note:. Most do not make anywhere near this...but it happens) Now if you mean top 1% wealthy, I find it hard to believe any Soc sci academic would make it in that range without substantial intergenerational wealth. Though that is generally how the vast majority of those people get there...",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "While I was an (older, vet on GI Bill) undergrad my mentor asked if I could pick a next step of my choosing what would it be. This was at a Ivy-adjacent university. I responded with \"easy, masters in public history, park ranger at historical site\". \"Why don't you do that?\" \"Because I want more than $40k to live on a year.\" \"Well your parents would help out with expenses, right?\" And right about then I realized my life experiences were very different from theirs. I knew this before hand, but it was a stern reminder. If you want to be wealthy as a humanities academic, it helps a lot to be born into money.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 10 | 4.581395 | {
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
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"content": "Historians write best-sellers and can probably make a good chunk of change with speaking tours. I'm specifically thinking Ibram X. Kendi here, who has written several best sellers and is ubiquitous on the speakers' market. He's also PhD in history, visiting at Harvard. Simon Baatz had a PhD in history and now writes historical true crime, also best selling. Short story: write popular books?",
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
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"content": "I found this revealing > [...] > To cut an already long story short, if you haven't got money to spare, academic career is clearly not for you. Academic jobs are for rich kids, or kids coming from countries where welfare states exist(ed). > [...]",
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
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},
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"content": "Historians write best-sellers and can probably make a good chunk of change with speaking tours. I'm specifically thinking Ibram X. Kendi here, who has written several best sellers and is ubiquitous on the speakers' market. He's also PhD in history, visiting at Harvard. Simon Baatz had a PhD in history and now writes historical true crime, also best selling. Short story: write popular books?",
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
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{
"content": "Historians write best-sellers and can probably make a good chunk of change with speaking tours. I'm specifically thinking Ibram X. Kendi here, who has written several best sellers and is ubiquitous on the speakers' market. He's also PhD in history, visiting at Harvard. Simon Baatz had a PhD in history and now writes historical true crime, also best selling. Short story: write popular books?",
"role": "assistant"
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
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"content": "I suppose it depends what you mean by wealthy. There are a reasonable number of social science academics with 200k+ salaries which is nearly 4x the median annual income of Americans. So, assuming good savings and investment to turn income into wealth -- pretty wealthy compared to the average American. (Note:. Most do not make anywhere near this...but it happens) Now if you mean top 1% wealthy, I find it hard to believe any Soc sci academic would make it in that range without substantial intergenerational wealth. Though that is generally how the vast majority of those people get there...",
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Historians write best-sellers and can probably make a good chunk of change with speaking tours. I'm specifically thinking Ibram X. Kendi here, who has written several best sellers and is ubiquitous on the speakers' market. He's also PhD in history, visiting at Harvard. Simon Baatz had a PhD in history and now writes historical true crime, also best selling. Short story: write popular books?",
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Historians write best-sellers and can probably make a good chunk of change with speaking tours. I'm specifically thinking Ibram X. Kendi here, who has written several best sellers and is ubiquitous on the speakers' market. He's also PhD in history, visiting at Harvard. Simon Baatz had a PhD in history and now writes historical true crime, also best selling. Short story: write popular books?",
"role": "assistant"
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
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"content": "Jordan Peterson sells lobster-themed merch.",
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Historians write best-sellers and can probably make a good chunk of change with speaking tours. I'm specifically thinking Ibram X. Kendi here, who has written several best sellers and is ubiquitous on the speakers' market. He's also PhD in history, visiting at Harvard. Simon Baatz had a PhD in history and now writes historical true crime, also best selling. Short story: write popular books?",
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I found this revealing > [...] > To cut an already long story short, if you haven't got money to spare, academic career is clearly not for you. Academic jobs are for rich kids, or kids coming from countries where welfare states exist(ed). > [...]",
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] | [
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I suppose it depends what you mean by wealthy. There are a reasonable number of social science academics with 200k+ salaries which is nearly 4x the median annual income of Americans. So, assuming good savings and investment to turn income into wealth -- pretty wealthy compared to the average American. (Note:. Most do not make anywhere near this...but it happens) Now if you mean top 1% wealthy, I find it hard to believe any Soc sci academic would make it in that range without substantial intergenerational wealth. Though that is generally how the vast majority of those people get there...",
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] | [
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I found this revealing > [...] > To cut an already long story short, if you haven't got money to spare, academic career is clearly not for you. Academic jobs are for rich kids, or kids coming from countries where welfare states exist(ed). > [...]",
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I found this revealing > [...] > To cut an already long story short, if you haven't got money to spare, academic career is clearly not for you. Academic jobs are for rich kids, or kids coming from countries where welfare states exist(ed). > [...]",
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] | [
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Jordan Peterson sells lobster-themed merch.",
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] | [
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I found this revealing > [...] > To cut an already long story short, if you haven't got money to spare, academic career is clearly not for you. Academic jobs are for rich kids, or kids coming from countries where welfare states exist(ed). > [...]",
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
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"content": "A lot of public universities have the salary information of professors available online, you can look at the numbers there and see what constitutes well paid or not. Some may make decent or moderately good wages, but also live in areas with a very low cost of living. Then, even if you aren't \"wealthy\" you can be very comfortable. Some of it is relative wage to cost of living essentially.",
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] | [
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I suppose it depends what you mean by wealthy. There are a reasonable number of social science academics with 200k+ salaries which is nearly 4x the median annual income of Americans. So, assuming good savings and investment to turn income into wealth -- pretty wealthy compared to the average American. (Note:. Most do not make anywhere near this...but it happens) Now if you mean top 1% wealthy, I find it hard to believe any Soc sci academic would make it in that range without substantial intergenerational wealth. Though that is generally how the vast majority of those people get there...",
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] | [
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "A lot of public universities have the salary information of professors available online, you can look at the numbers there and see what constitutes well paid or not. Some may make decent or moderately good wages, but also live in areas with a very low cost of living. Then, even if you aren't \"wealthy\" you can be very comfortable. Some of it is relative wage to cost of living essentially.",
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] | 8.012821 | 7.919797 | {
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "A lot of public universities have the salary information of professors available online, you can look at the numbers there and see what constitutes well paid or not. Some may make decent or moderately good wages, but also live in areas with a very low cost of living. Then, even if you aren't \"wealthy\" you can be very comfortable. Some of it is relative wage to cost of living essentially.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Jordan Peterson sells lobster-themed merch.",
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}
] | [
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "A lot of public universities have the salary information of professors available online, you can look at the numbers there and see what constitutes well paid or not. Some may make decent or moderately good wages, but also live in areas with a very low cost of living. Then, even if you aren't \"wealthy\" you can be very comfortable. Some of it is relative wage to cost of living essentially.",
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
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"content": "The best paid professors in a large public R1 university humanities department—near retirement and bigger names in the field— pull down 200k salary, plus publishing, speaker fees etc. Everyone else is 70k-100k depending on tenure and years in the field. Adjuncts and grad students make 20-40k in the same department and do most of the teaching.",
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
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"content": "It would appear the best route to money at the moment is to become some kind of right-wing grifter. As for general academia, no, it's not really a well paying job (given alternative professions with a similar training investment level)",
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
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"content": "The best paid professors in a large public R1 university humanities department—near retirement and bigger names in the field— pull down 200k salary, plus publishing, speaker fees etc. Everyone else is 70k-100k depending on tenure and years in the field. Adjuncts and grad students make 20-40k in the same department and do most of the teaching.",
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
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"content": "The best paid professors in a large public R1 university humanities department—near retirement and bigger names in the field— pull down 200k salary, plus publishing, speaker fees etc. Everyone else is 70k-100k depending on tenure and years in the field. Adjuncts and grad students make 20-40k in the same department and do most of the teaching.",
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
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"content": "If you look up economics professor salary, you will find that starting salary for AP is close to 200k in top 20 schools",
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
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"content": "The best paid professors in a large public R1 university humanities department—near retirement and bigger names in the field— pull down 200k salary, plus publishing, speaker fees etc. Everyone else is 70k-100k depending on tenure and years in the field. Adjuncts and grad students make 20-40k in the same department and do most of the teaching.",
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
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"content": "The best paid professors in a large public R1 university humanities department—near retirement and bigger names in the field— pull down 200k salary, plus publishing, speaker fees etc. Everyone else is 70k-100k depending on tenure and years in the field. Adjuncts and grad students make 20-40k in the same department and do most of the teaching.",
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
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"content": "UK perspective, might just be my circle. The wealthy ones I know make most of their money from consulting. They get very little money from their books and do most events for free as a favour to their connections. The academic salary is not much for the first 4-5 years. By the time you become a senior lecturer, you get to a junior banker level. Towards the end of PhD we were joking we either have to come from a rich family or have a wealthy, non-academia partner if we want to live like normal people.",
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
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"content": "The best paid professors in a large public R1 university humanities department—near retirement and bigger names in the field— pull down 200k salary, plus publishing, speaker fees etc. Everyone else is 70k-100k depending on tenure and years in the field. Adjuncts and grad students make 20-40k in the same department and do most of the teaching.",
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "The best paid professors in a large public R1 university humanities department—near retirement and bigger names in the field— pull down 200k salary, plus publishing, speaker fees etc. Everyone else is 70k-100k depending on tenure and years in the field. Adjuncts and grad students make 20-40k in the same department and do most of the teaching.",
"role": "assistant"
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
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"content": "Sure, write a best-selling textbook... a must-have for every intro course in your field.",
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{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
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"content": "The best paid professors in a large public R1 university humanities department—near retirement and bigger names in the field— pull down 200k salary, plus publishing, speaker fees etc. Everyone else is 70k-100k depending on tenure and years in the field. Adjuncts and grad students make 20-40k in the same department and do most of the teaching.",
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
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{
"content": "My PhD supervisor bought his house in the 1970s at a time when his neighbourhood (close to the university) was considered a bit of a slum... but the neighbourhood gentrified and the house is now worth over a million. Both he and his partner were full professors when they retired, each making more than $200k/year. I don't know if you'd consider that wealthy, but I would imagine that sort of money would allow one to live a very comfortable lifestyle. Starting salaries for assistant professors (tenure line) in Canada typically range between $60-$100k, so even an early career researcher can be pretty comfortable.",
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I think most hope to one day reach a dream salary of $60,000 with benefits like health insurance. \"Some day!\" echoes through the colleges every semester. \"Some day\" we'll get a full time job making the same as the undergrads we teach do their first year out of college. Some day.",
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "My PhD supervisor bought his house in the 1970s at a time when his neighbourhood (close to the university) was considered a bit of a slum... but the neighbourhood gentrified and the house is now worth over a million. Both he and his partner were full professors when they retired, each making more than $200k/year. I don't know if you'd consider that wealthy, but I would imagine that sort of money would allow one to live a very comfortable lifestyle. Starting salaries for assistant professors (tenure line) in Canada typically range between $60-$100k, so even an early career researcher can be pretty comfortable.",
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "My PhD supervisor bought his house in the 1970s at a time when his neighbourhood (close to the university) was considered a bit of a slum... but the neighbourhood gentrified and the house is now worth over a million. Both he and his partner were full professors when they retired, each making more than $200k/year. I don't know if you'd consider that wealthy, but I would imagine that sort of money would allow one to live a very comfortable lifestyle. Starting salaries for assistant professors (tenure line) in Canada typically range between $60-$100k, so even an early career researcher can be pretty comfortable.",
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "UK perspective, might just be my circle. The wealthy ones I know make most of their money from consulting. They get very little money from their books and do most events for free as a favour to their connections. The academic salary is not much for the first 4-5 years. By the time you become a senior lecturer, you get to a junior banker level. Towards the end of PhD we were joking we either have to come from a rich family or have a wealthy, non-academia partner if we want to live like normal people.",
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] | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "My PhD supervisor bought his house in the 1970s at a time when his neighbourhood (close to the university) was considered a bit of a slum... but the neighbourhood gentrified and the house is now worth over a million. Both he and his partner were full professors when they retired, each making more than $200k/year. I don't know if you'd consider that wealthy, but I would imagine that sort of money would allow one to live a very comfortable lifestyle. Starting salaries for assistant professors (tenure line) in Canada typically range between $60-$100k, so even an early career researcher can be pretty comfortable.",
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "My PhD supervisor bought his house in the 1970s at a time when his neighbourhood (close to the university) was considered a bit of a slum... but the neighbourhood gentrified and the house is now worth over a million. Both he and his partner were full professors when they retired, each making more than $200k/year. I don't know if you'd consider that wealthy, but I would imagine that sort of money would allow one to live a very comfortable lifestyle. Starting salaries for assistant professors (tenure line) in Canada typically range between $60-$100k, so even an early career researcher can be pretty comfortable.",
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] | [
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
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"content": "Sure, write a best-selling textbook... a must-have for every intro course in your field.",
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{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "My PhD supervisor bought his house in the 1970s at a time when his neighbourhood (close to the university) was considered a bit of a slum... but the neighbourhood gentrified and the house is now worth over a million. Both he and his partner were full professors when they retired, each making more than $200k/year. I don't know if you'd consider that wealthy, but I would imagine that sort of money would allow one to live a very comfortable lifestyle. Starting salaries for assistant professors (tenure line) in Canada typically range between $60-$100k, so even an early career researcher can be pretty comfortable.",
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "My PhD supervisor bought his house in the 1970s at a time when his neighbourhood (close to the university) was considered a bit of a slum... but the neighbourhood gentrified and the house is now worth over a million. Both he and his partner were full professors when they retired, each making more than $200k/year. I don't know if you'd consider that wealthy, but I would imagine that sort of money would allow one to live a very comfortable lifestyle. Starting salaries for assistant professors (tenure line) in Canada typically range between $60-$100k, so even an early career researcher can be pretty comfortable.",
"role": "assistant"
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] | [
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
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"content": "If the landscape is so terrible for making a living, why do people chose this career path?",
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{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "My PhD supervisor bought his house in the 1970s at a time when his neighbourhood (close to the university) was considered a bit of a slum... but the neighbourhood gentrified and the house is now worth over a million. Both he and his partner were full professors when they retired, each making more than $200k/year. I don't know if you'd consider that wealthy, but I would imagine that sort of money would allow one to live a very comfortable lifestyle. Starting salaries for assistant professors (tenure line) in Canada typically range between $60-$100k, so even an early career researcher can be pretty comfortable.",
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] | 5.705128 | 4.505128 | {
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "My PhD supervisor bought his house in the 1970s at a time when his neighbourhood (close to the university) was considered a bit of a slum... but the neighbourhood gentrified and the house is now worth over a million. Both he and his partner were full professors when they retired, each making more than $200k/year. I don't know if you'd consider that wealthy, but I would imagine that sort of money would allow one to live a very comfortable lifestyle. Starting salaries for assistant professors (tenure line) in Canada typically range between $60-$100k, so even an early career researcher can be pretty comfortable.",
"role": "assistant"
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] | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
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"content": "If you spend less than you make, you can be wealthy - not 1%, but definitely comfortable. You get to choose how much your life costs. Having kids, buying lots of stuff and replacing it often, buying cars/boats/etc. on credit, living in an expensive city, and/or buying a house you cannot quite comfortably afford makes it much harder to live beneath your means. For tenured positions in the US, you can live a reasonably comfortable on a professor's salary. I am in STEM, not in the social sciences, but our pay scale is fairly consistent from department to department, and all of our salaries are publicly available. A different question is: will this be possible going forward? I am not sure, but I think it will be much more difficult as the tenure track positions are going away. So the answer may look very different in 10 years from now.",
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "My PhD supervisor bought his house in the 1970s at a time when his neighbourhood (close to the university) was considered a bit of a slum... but the neighbourhood gentrified and the house is now worth over a million. Both he and his partner were full professors when they retired, each making more than $200k/year. I don't know if you'd consider that wealthy, but I would imagine that sort of money would allow one to live a very comfortable lifestyle. Starting salaries for assistant professors (tenure line) in Canada typically range between $60-$100k, so even an early career researcher can be pretty comfortable.",
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I think most hope to one day reach a dream salary of $60,000 with benefits like health insurance. \"Some day!\" echoes through the colleges every semester. \"Some day\" we'll get a full time job making the same as the undergrads we teach do their first year out of college. Some day.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Sure, write a best-selling textbook... a must-have for every intro course in your field.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I think most hope to one day reach a dream salary of $60,000 with benefits like health insurance. \"Some day!\" echoes through the colleges every semester. \"Some day\" we'll get a full time job making the same as the undergrads we teach do their first year out of college. Some day.",
"role": "assistant"
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] | 5.641026 | 5.391026 | {
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "UK perspective, might just be my circle. The wealthy ones I know make most of their money from consulting. They get very little money from their books and do most events for free as a favour to their connections. The academic salary is not much for the first 4-5 years. By the time you become a senior lecturer, you get to a junior banker level. Towards the end of PhD we were joking we either have to come from a rich family or have a wealthy, non-academia partner if we want to live like normal people.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Sure, write a best-selling textbook... a must-have for every intro course in your field.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "UK perspective, might just be my circle. The wealthy ones I know make most of their money from consulting. They get very little money from their books and do most events for free as a favour to their connections. The academic salary is not much for the first 4-5 years. By the time you become a senior lecturer, you get to a junior banker level. Towards the end of PhD we were joking we either have to come from a rich family or have a wealthy, non-academia partner if we want to live like normal people.",
"role": "assistant"
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
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{
"content": "Academics don't get wealthy as a rule. It's a middle class profession where you get paid for your labor. If an academic gets wealthy, it's not through academia.",
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Sure, write a best-selling textbook... a must-have for every intro course in your field.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Academics don't get wealthy as a rule. It's a middle class profession where you get paid for your labor. If an academic gets wealthy, it's not through academia.",
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] | 5.576923 | 5.451923 | {
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
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"content": "Academics don't get wealthy as a rule. It's a middle class profession where you get paid for your labor. If an academic gets wealthy, it's not through academia.",
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{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
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"content": "I can only speak for Economics, which is I think considered a social science, but the top professors regularly will make in the mid six figures. Raj Chetty, for example, I am pretty sure is paid upwards of 800k+ by Harvard.",
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
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"content": "Academics don't get wealthy as a rule. It's a middle class profession where you get paid for your labor. If an academic gets wealthy, it's not through academia.",
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
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"content": "Academics don't get wealthy as a rule. It's a middle class profession where you get paid for your labor. If an academic gets wealthy, it's not through academia.",
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
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"content": "If the landscape is so terrible for making a living, why do people chose this career path?",
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"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
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"content": "Academics don't get wealthy as a rule. It's a middle class profession where you get paid for your labor. If an academic gets wealthy, it's not through academia.",
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
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"content": "Academics don't get wealthy as a rule. It's a middle class profession where you get paid for your labor. If an academic gets wealthy, it's not through academia.",
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{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
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{
"content": "If you spend less than you make, you can be wealthy - not 1%, but definitely comfortable. You get to choose how much your life costs. Having kids, buying lots of stuff and replacing it often, buying cars/boats/etc. on credit, living in an expensive city, and/or buying a house you cannot quite comfortably afford makes it much harder to live beneath your means. For tenured positions in the US, you can live a reasonably comfortable on a professor's salary. I am in STEM, not in the social sciences, but our pay scale is fairly consistent from department to department, and all of our salaries are publicly available. A different question is: will this be possible going forward? I am not sure, but I think it will be much more difficult as the tenure track positions are going away. So the answer may look very different in 10 years from now.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Academics don't get wealthy as a rule. It's a middle class profession where you get paid for your labor. If an academic gets wealthy, it's not through academia.",
"role": "assistant"
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] | 5.576923 | 4.776923 | {
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I can only speak for Economics, which is I think considered a social science, but the top professors regularly will make in the mid six figures. Raj Chetty, for example, I am pretty sure is paid upwards of 800k+ by Harvard.",
"role": "assistant"
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] | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "If the landscape is so terrible for making a living, why do people chose this career path?",
"role": "assistant"
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] | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I can only speak for Economics, which is I think considered a social science, but the top professors regularly will make in the mid six figures. Raj Chetty, for example, I am pretty sure is paid upwards of 800k+ by Harvard.",
"role": "assistant"
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] | 5.384615 | 5.184615 | {
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Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that! | cb1079b5f9592d138a18d17c8e2893d5e3077aeb1b08bb22b2bb7c84b9364c12 | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I can only speak for Economics, which is I think considered a social science, but the top professors regularly will make in the mid six figures. Raj Chetty, for example, I am pretty sure is paid upwards of 800k+ by Harvard.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "If you spend less than you make, you can be wealthy - not 1%, but definitely comfortable. You get to choose how much your life costs. Having kids, buying lots of stuff and replacing it often, buying cars/boats/etc. on credit, living in an expensive city, and/or buying a house you cannot quite comfortably afford makes it much harder to live beneath your means. For tenured positions in the US, you can live a reasonably comfortable on a professor's salary. I am in STEM, not in the social sciences, but our pay scale is fairly consistent from department to department, and all of our salaries are publicly available. A different question is: will this be possible going forward? I am not sure, but I think it will be much more difficult as the tenure track positions are going away. So the answer may look very different in 10 years from now.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Do humanities / social science academics ever get wealthy? Is it consulting? Speaking fees? Books? What earns you money when the academic salary isn’t glamorous? Yes, I know, academics aren’t necessarily in it for money... But I’m not saying that!",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I can only speak for Economics, which is I think considered a social science, but the top professors regularly will make in the mid six figures. Raj Chetty, for example, I am pretty sure is paid upwards of 800k+ by Harvard.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.384615 | 5.184615 | {
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Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "But the two essays, though on the same subject, were completely different? I'm not sure about you, but I have yet to have a student who wanted to write two separate essays just to fuck with a professor.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Did they use the same sources?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "But the two essays, though on the same subject, were completely different? I'm not sure about you, but I have yet to have a student who wanted to write two separate essays just to fuck with a professor.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 9.679487 | 5.812821 | {
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Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "But the two essays, though on the same subject, were completely different? I'm not sure about you, but I have yet to have a student who wanted to write two separate essays just to fuck with a professor.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Could they be twins who take turns doing each other's work but in a way that doesn't look like plagiarism?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "But the two essays, though on the same subject, were completely different? I'm not sure about you, but I have yet to have a student who wanted to write two separate essays just to fuck with a professor.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 9.679487 | 2.568376 | {
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"post_id": "8d8ggj",
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"raw_score_rejected": 9,
"seconds_difference": 1420,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here's one possibility--both students are fictitious and were conjured as part of a research study that tests how professors respond to small variations in student names (that might, for instance, contain racial or socio-economic information).",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "You should swap and return the essays to the wrong one, so they're forced to meet to trade for the right essay.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here's one possibility--both students are fictitious and were conjured as part of a research study that tests how professors respond to small variations in student names (that might, for instance, contain racial or socio-economic information).",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 9.423077 | 9.344952 | {
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Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here's one possibility--both students are fictitious and were conjured as part of a research study that tests how professors respond to small variations in student names (that might, for instance, contain racial or socio-economic information).",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "They know each other (siblings or cousins) and worked on it together. Did the right thing and wrote their own, but worked on them at the same time and decided together that they were done and it was time to submit.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here's one possibility--both students are fictitious and were conjured as part of a research study that tests how professors respond to small variations in student names (that might, for instance, contain racial or socio-economic information).",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 9.423077 | 7.286713 | {
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"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here's one possibility--both students are fictitious and were conjured as part of a research study that tests how professors respond to small variations in student names (that might, for instance, contain racial or socio-economic information).",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Did they use the same sources?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here's one possibility--both students are fictitious and were conjured as part of a research study that tests how professors respond to small variations in student names (that might, for instance, contain racial or socio-economic information).",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 9.423077 | 5.823077 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "8d8ggj",
"raw_score_chosen": 69,
"raw_score_ratio": 4.6,
"raw_score_rejected": 15,
"seconds_difference": 9763,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here's one possibility--both students are fictitious and were conjured as part of a research study that tests how professors respond to small variations in student names (that might, for instance, contain racial or socio-economic information).",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Could they be twins who take turns doing each other's work but in a way that doesn't look like plagiarism?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Here's one possibility--both students are fictitious and were conjured as part of a research study that tests how professors respond to small variations in student names (that might, for instance, contain racial or socio-economic information).",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 9.423077 | 2.75641 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "8d8ggj",
"raw_score_chosen": 69,
"raw_score_ratio": 7.6666666667,
"raw_score_rejected": 9,
"seconds_difference": 9062,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "You should swap and return the essays to the wrong one, so they're forced to meet to trade for the right essay.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "They know each other (siblings or cousins) and worked on it together. Did the right thing and wrote their own, but worked on them at the same time and decided together that they were done and it was time to submit.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "You should swap and return the essays to the wrong one, so they're forced to meet to trade for the right essay.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 9.102564 | 7.193473 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "8d8ggj",
"raw_score_chosen": 64,
"raw_score_ratio": 2.9090909091,
"raw_score_rejected": 22,
"seconds_difference": 124,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "You should swap and return the essays to the wrong one, so they're forced to meet to trade for the right essay.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Did they use the same sources?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "You should swap and return the essays to the wrong one, so they're forced to meet to trade for the right essay.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 9.102564 | 5.835897 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "8d8ggj",
"raw_score_chosen": 64,
"raw_score_ratio": 4.2666666667,
"raw_score_rejected": 15,
"seconds_difference": 4021,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "You should swap and return the essays to the wrong one, so they're forced to meet to trade for the right essay.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Could they be twins who take turns doing each other's work but in a way that doesn't look like plagiarism?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "You should swap and return the essays to the wrong one, so they're forced to meet to trade for the right essay.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 9.102564 | 2.991453 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "8d8ggj",
"raw_score_chosen": 64,
"raw_score_ratio": 7.1111111111,
"raw_score_rejected": 9,
"seconds_difference": 3320,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I had two students with the same last name, and they were clearly twins, but they didn't acknowledge each other in class. They sat on opposite sides of the room and came in at different times. One was an absolutely model student. Picked up the content, never turned in anything late, was always on time. The other one failed the course, missed class regularly, was constantly pestering me over email. She ended up falsifying some emails from me to try launch a grade appeal. I believe she was expelled for that, or at least had some kind of hearing. It was a real-life evil twin.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "They know each other (siblings or cousins) and worked on it together. Did the right thing and wrote their own, but worked on them at the same time and decided together that they were done and it was time to submit.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I had two students with the same last name, and they were clearly twins, but they didn't acknowledge each other in class. They sat on opposite sides of the room and came in at different times. One was an absolutely model student. Picked up the content, never turned in anything late, was always on time. The other one failed the course, missed class regularly, was constantly pestering me over email. She ended up falsifying some emails from me to try launch a grade appeal. I believe she was expelled for that, or at least had some kind of hearing. It was a real-life evil twin.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 7.692308 | 6.783217 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "8d8ggj",
"raw_score_chosen": 42,
"raw_score_ratio": 1.9090909091,
"raw_score_rejected": 22,
"seconds_difference": 8469,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I had two students with the same last name, and they were clearly twins, but they didn't acknowledge each other in class. They sat on opposite sides of the room and came in at different times. One was an absolutely model student. Picked up the content, never turned in anything late, was always on time. The other one failed the course, missed class regularly, was constantly pestering me over email. She ended up falsifying some emails from me to try launch a grade appeal. I believe she was expelled for that, or at least had some kind of hearing. It was a real-life evil twin.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Did they use the same sources?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I had two students with the same last name, and they were clearly twins, but they didn't acknowledge each other in class. They sat on opposite sides of the room and came in at different times. One was an absolutely model student. Picked up the content, never turned in anything late, was always on time. The other one failed the course, missed class regularly, was constantly pestering me over email. She ended up falsifying some emails from me to try launch a grade appeal. I believe she was expelled for that, or at least had some kind of hearing. It was a real-life evil twin.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 7.692308 | 5.892308 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "8d8ggj",
"raw_score_chosen": 42,
"raw_score_ratio": 2.8,
"raw_score_rejected": 15,
"seconds_difference": 12366,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I had two students with the same last name, and they were clearly twins, but they didn't acknowledge each other in class. They sat on opposite sides of the room and came in at different times. One was an absolutely model student. Picked up the content, never turned in anything late, was always on time. The other one failed the course, missed class regularly, was constantly pestering me over email. She ended up falsifying some emails from me to try launch a grade appeal. I believe she was expelled for that, or at least had some kind of hearing. It was a real-life evil twin.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Could they be twins who take turns doing each other's work but in a way that doesn't look like plagiarism?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I had two students with the same last name, and they were clearly twins, but they didn't acknowledge each other in class. They sat on opposite sides of the room and came in at different times. One was an absolutely model student. Picked up the content, never turned in anything late, was always on time. The other one failed the course, missed class regularly, was constantly pestering me over email. She ended up falsifying some emails from me to try launch a grade appeal. I believe she was expelled for that, or at least had some kind of hearing. It was a real-life evil twin.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 7.692308 | 4.025641 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "8d8ggj",
"raw_score_chosen": 42,
"raw_score_ratio": 4.6666666667,
"raw_score_rejected": 9,
"seconds_difference": 11665,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "They know each other (siblings or cousins) and worked on it together. Did the right thing and wrote their own, but worked on them at the same time and decided together that they were done and it was time to submit.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Did they use the same sources?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "They know each other (siblings or cousins) and worked on it together. Did the right thing and wrote their own, but worked on them at the same time and decided together that they were done and it was time to submit.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 6.410256 | 5.94359 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "8d8ggj",
"raw_score_chosen": 22,
"raw_score_ratio": 1.4666666667,
"raw_score_rejected": 15,
"seconds_difference": 3897,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "They know each other (siblings or cousins) and worked on it together. Did the right thing and wrote their own, but worked on them at the same time and decided together that they were done and it was time to submit.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Could they be twins who take turns doing each other's work but in a way that doesn't look like plagiarism?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "They know each other (siblings or cousins) and worked on it together. Did the right thing and wrote their own, but worked on them at the same time and decided together that they were done and it was time to submit.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 6.410256 | 4.965812 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "8d8ggj",
"raw_score_chosen": 22,
"raw_score_ratio": 2.4444444444,
"raw_score_rejected": 9,
"seconds_difference": 3196,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Alright, here's what you do: Have the class physically hand in some sort of paper. Then, when returning the work, \"accidentally\" mix up their papers. Boom. Cue movie-style meet-cute and they become lifelong best friends. Or have the class pair up to work on a project by alphabetical order (here's to hoping they match up numbers-wise in the class). Obviously you're now required to report back to us.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Could they be twins who take turns doing each other's work but in a way that doesn't look like plagiarism?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Alright, here's what you do: Have the class physically hand in some sort of paper. Then, when returning the work, \"accidentally\" mix up their papers. Boom. Cue movie-style meet-cute and they become lifelong best friends. Or have the class pair up to work on a project by alphabetical order (here's to hoping they match up numbers-wise in the class). Obviously you're now required to report back to us.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.641026 | 5.529915 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "8d8ggj",
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"raw_score_ratio": 1.1111111111,
"raw_score_rejected": 9,
"seconds_difference": 33160,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Alright, here's what you do: Have the class physically hand in some sort of paper. Then, when returning the work, \"accidentally\" mix up their papers. Boom. Cue movie-style meet-cute and they become lifelong best friends. Or have the class pair up to work on a project by alphabetical order (here's to hoping they match up numbers-wise in the class). Obviously you're now required to report back to us.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Have you seen either of these students in person? Could it be a single student who somehow registered for the class twice, maybe an overachiever who wants to have two chances to earn the best possible final grade?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Alright, here's what you do: Have the class physically hand in some sort of paper. Then, when returning the work, \"accidentally\" mix up their papers. Boom. Cue movie-style meet-cute and they become lifelong best friends. Or have the class pair up to work on a project by alphabetical order (here's to hoping they match up numbers-wise in the class). Obviously you're now required to report back to us.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.641026 | 4.974359 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "8d8ggj",
"raw_score_chosen": 10,
"raw_score_ratio": 1.6666666667,
"raw_score_rejected": 6,
"seconds_difference": 12478,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Alright, here's what you do: Have the class physically hand in some sort of paper. Then, when returning the work, \"accidentally\" mix up their papers. Boom. Cue movie-style meet-cute and they become lifelong best friends. Or have the class pair up to work on a project by alphabetical order (here's to hoping they match up numbers-wise in the class). Obviously you're now required to report back to us.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "How will I ever learn the resolution of this?? Please contact me specifically when you drop the other shoe.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Alright, here's what you do: Have the class physically hand in some sort of paper. Then, when returning the work, \"accidentally\" mix up their papers. Boom. Cue movie-style meet-cute and they become lifelong best friends. Or have the class pair up to work on a project by alphabetical order (here's to hoping they match up numbers-wise in the class). Obviously you're now required to report back to us.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.641026 | 3.307692 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "8d8ggj",
"raw_score_chosen": 10,
"raw_score_ratio": 3.3333333333,
"raw_score_rejected": 3,
"seconds_difference": 17385,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "1) One is a Russian bot 2) Are they both named Darrel or Darryl? Look for a Larry if so.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Have you seen either of these students in person? Could it be a single student who somehow registered for the class twice, maybe an overachiever who wants to have two chances to earn the best possible final grade?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "1) One is a Russian bot 2) Are they both named Darrel or Darryl? Look for a Larry if so.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.576923 | 5.076923 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "8d8ggj",
"raw_score_chosen": 9,
"raw_score_ratio": 1.5,
"raw_score_rejected": 6,
"seconds_difference": 19398,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "1) One is a Russian bot 2) Are they both named Darrel or Darryl? Look for a Larry if so.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "How will I ever learn the resolution of this?? Please contact me specifically when you drop the other shoe.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "1) One is a Russian bot 2) Are they both named Darrel or Darryl? Look for a Larry if so.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.576923 | 3.576923 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "8d8ggj",
"raw_score_chosen": 9,
"raw_score_ratio": 3,
"raw_score_rejected": 3,
"seconds_difference": 24305,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I have no answer to your dilema OP, but do have a similar story. Back in the mid-1990s when I was a grad student I was teaching a huge lecture class at an R1...something like 350 students. I had a take-home final that included a short essay with very clear instructions about not talking about the question or working with anyone else. As I started grading I alphabetized the papers and broke them into stacks...in the one I did I read a decent (solid B?) response, then two papers later read another decent response that seemed similar enough that I flipped back to the prior one-- they were identical, word-for-word. I confronted the two students separately, and both claimed not to know the other, couldn't imagine what had happened, etc.; then one eventually said she might have left her essay open on a public computer in the library (back then people used public computer clusters) and perhaps the other student stole it? A bit more pushing and they both admitted they cheated, wrote the essay together and submitted it thinking nobody would notice in such a large pool of exams-- they didn't consider the chance we'd aphabetize them before grading and that their last names were just three spots apart in the roster. I failed them both on the final. Turns out one of them was the child of an associate professor in my graduate department who was flunking out of school, which made for some awkward hallway encouters for a few weeks.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Have you seen either of these students in person? Could it be a single student who somehow registered for the class twice, maybe an overachiever who wants to have two chances to earn the best possible final grade?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I have no answer to your dilema OP, but do have a similar story. Back in the mid-1990s when I was a grad student I was teaching a huge lecture class at an R1...something like 350 students. I had a take-home final that included a short essay with very clear instructions about not talking about the question or working with anyone else. As I started grading I alphabetized the papers and broke them into stacks...in the one I did I read a decent (solid B?) response, then two papers later read another decent response that seemed similar enough that I flipped back to the prior one-- they were identical, word-for-word. I confronted the two students separately, and both claimed not to know the other, couldn't imagine what had happened, etc.; then one eventually said she might have left her essay open on a public computer in the library (back then people used public computer clusters) and perhaps the other student stole it? A bit more pushing and they both admitted they cheated, wrote the essay together and submitted it thinking nobody would notice in such a large pool of exams-- they didn't consider the chance we'd aphabetize them before grading and that their last names were just three spots apart in the roster. I failed them both on the final. Turns out one of them was the child of an associate professor in my graduate department who was flunking out of school, which made for some awkward hallway encouters for a few weeks.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.576923 | 5.076923 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "8d8ggj",
"raw_score_chosen": 9,
"raw_score_ratio": 1.5,
"raw_score_rejected": 6,
"seconds_difference": 37301,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I have no answer to your dilema OP, but do have a similar story. Back in the mid-1990s when I was a grad student I was teaching a huge lecture class at an R1...something like 350 students. I had a take-home final that included a short essay with very clear instructions about not talking about the question or working with anyone else. As I started grading I alphabetized the papers and broke them into stacks...in the one I did I read a decent (solid B?) response, then two papers later read another decent response that seemed similar enough that I flipped back to the prior one-- they were identical, word-for-word. I confronted the two students separately, and both claimed not to know the other, couldn't imagine what had happened, etc.; then one eventually said she might have left her essay open on a public computer in the library (back then people used public computer clusters) and perhaps the other student stole it? A bit more pushing and they both admitted they cheated, wrote the essay together and submitted it thinking nobody would notice in such a large pool of exams-- they didn't consider the chance we'd aphabetize them before grading and that their last names were just three spots apart in the roster. I failed them both on the final. Turns out one of them was the child of an associate professor in my graduate department who was flunking out of school, which made for some awkward hallway encouters for a few weeks.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "How will I ever learn the resolution of this?? Please contact me specifically when you drop the other shoe.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "I have no answer to your dilema OP, but do have a similar story. Back in the mid-1990s when I was a grad student I was teaching a huge lecture class at an R1...something like 350 students. I had a take-home final that included a short essay with very clear instructions about not talking about the question or working with anyone else. As I started grading I alphabetized the papers and broke them into stacks...in the one I did I read a decent (solid B?) response, then two papers later read another decent response that seemed similar enough that I flipped back to the prior one-- they were identical, word-for-word. I confronted the two students separately, and both claimed not to know the other, couldn't imagine what had happened, etc.; then one eventually said she might have left her essay open on a public computer in the library (back then people used public computer clusters) and perhaps the other student stole it? A bit more pushing and they both admitted they cheated, wrote the essay together and submitted it thinking nobody would notice in such a large pool of exams-- they didn't consider the chance we'd aphabetize them before grading and that their last names were just three spots apart in the roster. I failed them both on the final. Turns out one of them was the child of an associate professor in my graduate department who was flunking out of school, which made for some awkward hallway encouters for a few weeks.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.576923 | 3.576923 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "8d8ggj",
"raw_score_chosen": 9,
"raw_score_ratio": 3,
"raw_score_rejected": 3,
"seconds_difference": 42208,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: "Here's the second response" vs. "Here is the second response", and they signed them identically e.g. "--Katrina" vs "--Katarina"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin? | ad55e32b65cf0b85ebb7f865e7d25874767db3b6d862b78efb38dd6dd930b399 | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Have you seen either of these students in person? Could it be a single student who somehow registered for the class twice, maybe an overachiever who wants to have two chances to earn the best possible final grade?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "How will I ever learn the resolution of this?? Please contact me specifically when you drop the other shoe.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Inexplicable grading mysteries I have no idea where to share this, but this experience is too specific for anyone outside of Academia to understand. I have an X-files level anomaly in my grading. In a big lecture class, I have two students with the same first and last name (ok, first name is different by one letter, think Katerina vs Katrina). Not that weird, sometimes I've had siblings etc. These students just turned in a response assignment--the class has 120 students in it, and the response is due on Monday, but they submitted it at the exact same time--one email came at 11:24, one at 11:25. Weird coincidence huh? Their emails are identical--except for a single apostrophe: \"Here's the second response\" vs. \"Here is the second response\", and they signed them identically e.g. \"--Katrina\" vs \"--Katarina\"-- same double-dash, same format, everything is the same. The responses are similarly on the exact same subject (despite the essay topic being very open), and yet completely different. So what is this? Are they clones? Soulmates? Are they pranking me? How does this even happen? Am I ethically obliged to introduce them to their spiritual twin?",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Have you seen either of these students in person? Could it be a single student who somehow registered for the class twice, maybe an overachiever who wants to have two chances to earn the best possible final grade?",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 5.384615 | 4.384615 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "8d8ggj",
"raw_score_chosen": 6,
"raw_score_ratio": 2,
"raw_score_rejected": 3,
"seconds_difference": 4907,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.98
} |
Access denied to the last version of a paper when I am first co-author I worked in a lab with a toxic PI until the end of 2020 and we try now to publish a paper with my work. We wrote the manuscript and at one point, the PI deleted the Dropbox we used and send me a pdf version of the article saying that the submission will come very soon and that there are some formatting issues to address but he will manage it alone. I received few months later the notification from the journal to accept that I am a co-author of the paper. I accepted (but I didnot have access to the version submitted). Now we have the comments of the reviewers and the PI ask me to answer to the comments but, despite my request, he is denying me access to the version that was submitted. Do we agree that it is illegal and unethical ? My suspicion is that he tries to hide the fact that he changed the positions of my authorship (from co-first author to second author) but I have no proof of that. What can I do ? Many thanks for your advices. | 9da1d956257a34c87685e28dcf5a92b7f29a4c05853025a261854d3dc2985f84 | [
{
"content": "Access denied to the last version of a paper when I am first co-author I worked in a lab with a toxic PI until the end of 2020 and we try now to publish a paper with my work. We wrote the manuscript and at one point, the PI deleted the Dropbox we used and send me a pdf version of the article saying that the submission will come very soon and that there are some formatting issues to address but he will manage it alone. I received few months later the notification from the journal to accept that I am a co-author of the paper. I accepted (but I didnot have access to the version submitted). Now we have the comments of the reviewers and the PI ask me to answer to the comments but, despite my request, he is denying me access to the version that was submitted. Do we agree that it is illegal and unethical ? My suspicion is that he tries to hide the fact that he changed the positions of my authorship (from co-first author to second author) but I have no proof of that. What can I do ? Many thanks for your advices.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Illegal - no. Unethical - yes. In breach of the journals publication requirements - almost certainly. Check the journals \"Instructions to authors\". There is almost certainly a statement or statements about authors agreeing to the submission and having seen the last version. If the PI is not in a retaliatory position, you can be quite tough on this. The PI almost certainly had to make a statement that all authors agreed to the authorship listing during the submission process. Lastly, you have a 100% right to NOT approve submission until you are happy. You can make that clear to the PI and if they go ahead without your consent, you can get in touch with the journal.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Access denied to the last version of a paper when I am first co-author I worked in a lab with a toxic PI until the end of 2020 and we try now to publish a paper with my work. We wrote the manuscript and at one point, the PI deleted the Dropbox we used and send me a pdf version of the article saying that the submission will come very soon and that there are some formatting issues to address but he will manage it alone. I received few months later the notification from the journal to accept that I am a co-author of the paper. I accepted (but I didnot have access to the version submitted). Now we have the comments of the reviewers and the PI ask me to answer to the comments but, despite my request, he is denying me access to the version that was submitted. Do we agree that it is illegal and unethical ? My suspicion is that he tries to hide the fact that he changed the positions of my authorship (from co-first author to second author) but I have no proof of that. What can I do ? Many thanks for your advices.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Illegal? No. Unethical? Maybe. You can confront him, or not. But we really can't provide any other advice.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | [
{
"content": "Access denied to the last version of a paper when I am first co-author I worked in a lab with a toxic PI until the end of 2020 and we try now to publish a paper with my work. We wrote the manuscript and at one point, the PI deleted the Dropbox we used and send me a pdf version of the article saying that the submission will come very soon and that there are some formatting issues to address but he will manage it alone. I received few months later the notification from the journal to accept that I am a co-author of the paper. I accepted (but I didnot have access to the version submitted). Now we have the comments of the reviewers and the PI ask me to answer to the comments but, despite my request, he is denying me access to the version that was submitted. Do we agree that it is illegal and unethical ? My suspicion is that he tries to hide the fact that he changed the positions of my authorship (from co-first author to second author) but I have no proof of that. What can I do ? Many thanks for your advices.",
"role": "user"
},
{
"content": "Illegal - no. Unethical - yes. In breach of the journals publication requirements - almost certainly. Check the journals \"Instructions to authors\". There is almost certainly a statement or statements about authors agreeing to the submission and having seen the last version. If the PI is not in a retaliatory position, you can be quite tough on this. The PI almost certainly had to make a statement that all authors agreed to the authorship listing during the submission process. Lastly, you have a 100% right to NOT approve submission until you are happy. You can make that clear to the PI and if they go ahead without your consent, you can get in touch with the journal.",
"role": "assistant"
}
] | 10 | 8.178571 | {
"domain": "askacademia_train",
"post_id": "xi25hg",
"raw_score_chosen": 158,
"raw_score_ratio": 2.8214285714,
"raw_score_rejected": 56,
"seconds_difference": 5493,
"source": "stanfordnlp/SHP",
"upvote_ratio": 0.96
} |
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