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===Verbal===
*Have an unacceptably high "er"/"um" rate [(10+/min])*Use repeated redundant (and preferably untrue) phrases [("OK?", "You see?", "Right?" <all no pause>, "Sooooo…", etc])*Have intonation that consistently goes up or down at the end of a sentence, or flat intonation*Experiment with poor volume control [(too loud, mumbling, or random variation])
*Develop (or capitalize on) an un-interpretable accent
*Try speaking only to the floor, ceiling, back wall , or black/whiteboard*Breathing should not come naturally - erratic and heavy breathing is ideal (but stop short of giving your students the hope that you may have a heart attack and so that class will end early)
===Physical Appearance===
===Motion===
*Pace back and forth [(so your students appear to be watching a tennis match])*Have poor control over some part of your body [(your hand taps the board, your head rolls around, etc. If you are a large person, let your outlying regions resonate])
===Black/Whiteboard===
*Use symbols or notation students haven’t seen before without introducing them
*Change notation randomly and criticize the choice of notation in the book (or better still in your own lecture notes)
*Write symbols that are confusing [(is it an s, S, ?, s or even a bad r? Is it a ?, F, T, Ø, O, o or O? Don’t make any reference to what the symbol might be])*Draw bad graphs [(not labeling the axes, too few or too many colors, lines on top of lines, etc])
*Always draw any second graph on top of the first
*Overtly screen your writing with your body [(allow occasional glimpses <500ms])
===Interaction with the class===
*Treat questions with disrespect [("No, that is a stupid question"])*Treat students with disrespect [("...and you are stupid for asking it"])*Inappropriately discuss personal details [("...as my wife/husband/masseuse told me last night"])
*Sexually harass one or more students of either or both genders
*Ask rhetorical questions
*Ask questions to which there is no right answer [(for bonus points single out a student at random])
*Ask questions and don’t wait for an answer (or always let the annoying visiting scholar answer)
*Never ask any questions (other than the above)
===Covering Material===
*Cover material that is way too advanced (or easy) for the median student in the class
*Don’t cover important material [(particularly say things like "this is left as a proof for you to do"])
*Proceed through material too quickly; especially consider accelerating towards the end of the class
*Never pause, or pause for too little time for anyone to catch up with you
*Or cover only material that is in neither
*Never explain either what you are about to do, are doing, or have just done
*If you use notes, skip a large number of steps and state the answer [(say e.g. "you can do the algebra"])
*Try to staple any notes you do bring in the wrong order
*If you don’t use notes, skip just enough steps to ensure that you have irrecoverably lost either the class or yourself
*Don’t submit the grades to the registrar until your students have been given an "incomplete"
*Never provide helpful information about the contents of your exam (disinformation is preferable to no information)
*Write the exam to maximize a concave convex combination of your own free time and the morale-damage to your students (an ideal exam would be unanswerable unreadable and take no time to write)
*Make sure no one finishes writing the exam on time; better yet, make sure no one even finishes reading the exam on time
*Remember, students may accidentally learn something from your exam - write your exam accordingly
*Assign your own research as term papers (for maximum effectiveness don’t tell your students that their work will be stolen)
*On important subject matters cite only your own personal work, regardless of how marginal its contribution actually is
*Ignore your colleagues’ findings and the shoulders of giants upon which your own work stands . All the credit is yours. *Set extremely large reading lists (a million pages is not unreasonable)
*Do not provide pdfs or print outs of papers; make the students find them from your obscure references
*Discourage any sharing of papers amongst students
Caveats:
*The peers who made contributions mentioned above shall remain nameless
*All characters implicitly or explicitly appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. It should particularly be understood that whilst this work was compiled at the University of California at Berkeley, it does not allude to or satirize any member or members of the faculty at said that institution. Even the large ones.

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