25 f California HS Teacher Looking For A Professor from USA

Joined
Feb 9, 2021
Posts
14
Important note: I will verify however you want. I am looking for someone who WORKS as a professor. Not a roleplay professor or someone who matches the traits of a professor. NOT A SELLER.

Hello,

I'm a high school teacher, and adjunct at a community college. I used to have an account on here, but I deleted it. I got bored of it, but realized how much I miss it. I think being on here is an addiction I have...

But so is me wanting to talk to professors... I know I will get a lot of questions about why professors?

**Here is why:**
-They are passionate
-They are authority figured
- They are well versed, well rounded, well balanced.
- Kinky (I have a thing for professors, and did suck off my professor in college and one I met on Reddit.
- They know what they want and how to get it.

**A little about me:**
- Gaming, running, making music, coaching, dancing, and being a terrible cook are my hobbies. I want to learn about yours.

- SFW and NSFW topics are okay. Either or both.
- UK born and raised (Yes, I have the accent)
- Moved to US two years ago.
- Kinky as fuck (anal, spanking, BDSM, bondage, dom/sub, rough sex, throat fucking, orgasm control)
- Athlete (Play many sports, coach water polo)
- Musician
- **RAMBLES A LOT**

**CATCH: You must prove you are a professor. Nothing personal needed for proof. I will prove I teach HS. ONLY PROFESSORS. EVERYBODY ELSE WILL BE BLOCKED. PLEASE be from USA.**

I'm happy to learn more about each other such as aspirations, more NSFW topics, etc once we message one another. I promise I'm looking for long term and won't ghost.

PM me if you are a professor from USA and are interested!

Thanks!
Anna
 
Serious question, would you consider an ex professor? I’m thinking of a friend who used to teach and now works as an economist for a prominent federal agency. I’m sure there are many others who transitioned that way as tenure can be difficult to get. Regrettably my friend is not on here, but I use him as an example.
 
Wishing you the best of luck in finding what you want- it is a solidly written personal with your desires nicely outlined. I have simply taught a class or two, not an actual professor, so I am out of it :p
 
Speculation ...

Actually, I have to say part of what makes this posting interesting is all the speculation about why it has to be a college professor. It's a very clever way of making a posting interesting, and also scoping down the candidates. On the surface, it appears that she has a scene or fantasy scenario that she wants to play out, and the power distance between a college professor and a student is key to the scenario, and she wants to make it as real as she can.

Also, this is an interesting way for a woman to vet candidates, and to ensure discretion. It clearly states in the ad that she is going to verify your credentials, which I assume means you have to be listed in the college directory or somewhere on their web page as a professor, and hold the rank of associate, assistant, or full professor. I would also think that both a visiting professor, and a professor emeritus would fit the requirements as long as they are listed as part of the faculty. That allows her to vet the potential candidates, and ensure that they are the "real thing", just like Coca Cola.

As to the attributes that she ascribes to a college professor, well .. that has to be part of the fantasy scenario because let me just say I've had a lot of professors who weren't passionate about their chosen field, and some that I thought weren't very well versed, well rounded, or well balanced. The characteristics listed below are her projection of what being a college professor means to her.


**Here is why:**
-They are passionate
-They are authority figured
- They are well versed, well rounded, well balanced.
- Kinky (I have a thing for professors, and did suck off my professor in college and one I met on Reddit.
- They know what they want and how to get it.


I think I get what she wants, and why she wants to have a professor.
 
I too was once a 25 yo HS Eng/Amer Lit teacher. Was on professor track, but union service and family called me away
 
I too was once a 25 yo HS Eng/Amer Lit teacher. Was on professor track, but union service and family called me away

Really?

So, I thought the track to become a Professor was that while you were working on you Ph.D. you would be a TA in the department that you would be getting your Ph.D in. Although I did know some H.S. teachers that went back to school for their Ph.D., I didn't think they were going to become researchers in the end.

I guess in my mind, what's the point of getting a Ph.D. if you aren't going to be doing some advanced research in the field at a University? I know things have changed a bit, particularly in the technology field, where alot of the technology we have has been created by researchers with entrepreneurial skills.

But hey, what do I know?
 
Important note: I will verify however you want. I am looking for someone who WORKS as a professor. Not a roleplay professor or someone who matches the traits of a professor. NOT A SELLER.

Hello,

I'm a high school teacher, and adjunct at a community college. I used to have an account on here, but I deleted it. I got bored of it, but realized how much I miss it. I think being on here is an addiction I have...

But so is me wanting to talk to professors... I know I will get a lot of questions about why professors?

**Here is why:**
-They are passionate
-They are authority figured
- They are well versed, well rounded, well balanced.
- Kinky (I have a thing for professors, and did suck off my professor in college and one I met on Reddit.
- They know what they want and how to get it.

**A little about me:**
- Gaming, running, making music, coaching, dancing, and being a terrible cook are my hobbies. I want to learn about yours.

- SFW and NSFW topics are okay. Either or both.
- UK born and raised (Yes, I have the accent)
- Moved to US two years ago.
- Kinky as fuck (anal, spanking, BDSM, bondage, dom/sub, rough sex, throat fucking, orgasm control)
- Athlete (Play many sports, coach water polo)
- Musician
- **RAMBLES A LOT**

**CATCH: You must prove you are a professor. Nothing personal needed for proof. I will prove I teach HS. ONLY PROFESSORS. EVERYBODY ELSE WILL BE BLOCKED. PLEASE be from USA.**

I'm happy to learn more about each other such as aspirations, more NSFW topics, etc once we message one another. I promise I'm looking for long term and won't ghost.

PM me if you are a professor from USA and are interested!

Thanks!
Anna


Not a Professor but I bet I could teach you a few things..would love to chat sometime
 
Not a Professor but I bet I could teach you a few things..would love to chat sometime

I'm not trying to throw rocks here -- but I'm just curious as to why did you decide to try for this "hail mary" reply, where her posting is quite clear she wants a professor?

Are you thinking that she won't find what she wants and will "settle" for someone who posts a one liner on her thread?

I'm just curious what the logic is .. I mean, I'm not a professor and so the only reason I commented on the thread is that I found the verification requirements interesting ..
 
Really?

So, I thought the track to become a Professor was that while you were working on you Ph.D. you would be a TA in the department that you would be getting your Ph.D in. Although I did know some H.S. teachers that went back to school for their Ph.D., I didn't think they were going to become researchers in the end.

I guess in my mind, what's the point of getting a Ph.D. if you aren't going to be doing some advanced research in the field at a University? I know things have changed a bit, particularly in the technology field, where alot of the technology we have has been created by researchers with entrepreneurial skills.

But hey, what do I know?

You are wrong. I have MSC and PhD. I am well published (over 30 top journal papers in my field of expertise, several book chapters), I have been keynote speaker on countless academic conferences, but I am not professor. I have chosen not to teach and concentrate on the research only and I do not do it at the University, but in one of the country's biggest research centres... On the other hand there are heaps of professors without PhD. In many countries teachers at high school level are being called "professor"... And then there are colleges and universities as well - big difference... Anyway... Just rant...
 
I'm not trying to throw rocks here -- but I'm just curious as to why did you decide to try for this "hail mary" reply, where her posting is quite clear she wants a professor?

Are you thinking that she won't find what she wants and will "settle" for someone who posts a one liner on her thread?

I'm just curious what the logic is .. I mean, I'm not a professor and so the only reason I commented on the thread is that I found the verification requirements interesting ..

Look at his post history. It’s a scattergun, five minutes before the lights come on at the discotheque approach.

Could be a myriad of reasons for it. He reminds me of a poster called “Studly” that no longer posts.
 
There seems to be some confusion out here about what a "professor" is, and with good reason. Informally, anyone who teaches a college-level class can be called "professor" by students, and in this sense he/she *is* a professor--and there may indeed be "heaps" of them.

Professionally speaking, however, the title of professor applies only to someone who holds the rank of professor as contractually designated by a college or university; almost all the time this means having a tenure-line position, and most of the time (but not all) this requires a doctorate. Generally, only those in a tenure-line position at a college or university can call themselves "professor" on their cv and can sign their letters as "assistant professor," "associate professor," or simply "professor" (which would mean "full professor").

There are other terminal degrees (MFA, perhaps a JD, etc) that can lead to a tenure-line position, though that's relatively unusual. A college or university can also hire someone into a tenure-line position with no advanced degrees, though again that's relatively unusual. There are also exceptions, particularly at colleges that don't have a tenure system, which may include many community colleges. If the college identifies them, contractually, as "professor," then that's what they are. But, to repeat, in general the only people who can formally and professionally identify themselves as "professor" on the dotted line are those who are recognized as having that rank by a college or university.

As someone out here said, if you were a professor and you retired, you're a professor emeritus. That person here did the professional thing and identified himself by his title. In my book, he still gets to call himself a professor!

And: a doctorate is generally a degree that has trained you to do research. Many grad students do earn money and get experience by being a TA.

Does this sound a bit ... like a professor's way of talking? Ha! In the end, it's Lit and folks can call themselves whatever they want....
 
Professionally speaking, however, the title of professor applies only to someone who holds the rank of professor as contractually designated by a college or university; almost all the time this means having a tenure-line position, and most of the time (but not all) this requires a doctorate. Generally, only those in a tenure-line position at a college or university can call themselves "professor" on their cv and can sign their letters as "assistant professor," "associate professor," or simply "professor" (which would mean "full professor").

And: a doctorate is generally a degree that has trained you to do research. Many grad students do earn money and get experience by being a TA.

Does this sound a bit ... like a professor's way of talking? Ha! In the end, it's Lit and folks can call themselves whatever they want....

OK,

So, after reading the successive posts, I see we do have a definition problem, don't we? GuyandDoll, thanks for illustrating the source of the confusion. I read her posting as wanting someone who was currently employed as a professor, or has retired from being a professor and has been honored by his academic institution with the title of professor emeritus.

The reason that I scoped the requirement so narrowly is that it seemed to me that she wanted someone that has experience and perhaps was on a tenure track, although they may not have achieved it yet. For example, someone who was teaching as an instructor wouldn't be qualified, nor would any graduate TAs who were technically teaching classes, but whose job category or job description didn't include professor in the title.

Again, the narrow interpretation of the requirement was based upon the rest of the characteristics she asked for, which definitely had the subtext of a power / distance relationship. Given that, my thought was that she wants someone where there is a significant gap in both age and experience to solidify that power / distance dynamic. Someone with less than 20 to 25 years in their field isn't going to have enough experience, and so my guess is that she's looking for someone 45 and up -- just based upon how long it takes to acquire the credentials.

That was my logic, although I do appreciate what masterslave00 pointed out after giving us his impressive set of credentials.
 
It IS interesting, what "professor" is code for, what it means. Maybe someone with the right credentials? The right age? Maybe someone who is overeducated, underpaid, pretentiously intellectual, and so powerless that he needs to take it out on everyone around him, including his students? Maybe a Gilligan's Island fantasy?

Because I'm interested in how things work out here, I am also interested in how anyone would prove that they're a professor without giving up any personal information. How would anyone do that? Contrast postmodern philosophy with Daoism, using Foucault's concept of knowledge/power as a mediating lens? Do a Lit riff on particle physics? Complain about student writing for hours and hours and hours? Send a redacted version of your latest article? Brag about the size of your ... degree?

It's all in good fun, it's all in good fun...
 
It IS interesting, what "professor" is code for, what it means. Maybe someone with the right credentials? The right age? Maybe someone who is overeducated, underpaid, pretentiously intellectual, and so powerless that he needs to take it out on everyone around him, including his students? Maybe a Gilligan's Island fantasy?

Because I'm interested in how things work out here, I am also interested in how anyone would prove that they're a professor without giving up any personal information. How would anyone do that? Contrast postmodern philosophy with Daoism, using Foucault's concept of knowledge/power as a mediating lens? Do a Lit riff on particle physics? Complain about student writing for hours and hours and hours? Send a redacted version of your latest article? Brag about the size of your ... degree?

It's all in good fun, it's all in good fun...

Well, I'd say the fact that we are over analyzing the post is just a sign that we've been locked down too long and are engaging in mental gymnastics to stave off boredom, but what do I know, I don't have a BIG degree in psychology?
 
Do NOT POST PERSONAL INFORMATION of yourself or anyone else. This is a major violation of forum rules.
 
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45 m. Professor of World Religions and European History

Hello.

I’m Dr. G.

I teach freshman humanities courses on world religion and upper division euro-history.

I’m always looking for fun. 😈
 
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