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The original was posted on /r/tifu by /u/Ok_Recording2643 on 2026-01-15 19:30:15+00:00.
This happened today and I want to die.
I'm in a large lecture hall class - about 100 students. Professor is explaining a concept I thought I understood really well because I'd read about it online. He says something I think is incorrect.
So I raise my hand. In front of everyone. And confidently, loudly, correct him.
He pauses. Looks at me. Asks if I'm sure. I double down. Say I'm certain, actually, because I'd just read about this.
He pulls up sources on the projector. Academic journals. Textbook excerpts. Data. All proving that I am spectacularly, embarrassingly wrong. And he's not even being a dick about it - he's calmly walking through why my understanding is flawed, which somehow makes it worse.
The silence in that room was deafening. You could hear 100 people collectively cringing on my behalf.
I tried to play it off like "oh interesting, I must have misread" but we all know. I fucked up. I confidently, publicly fucked up in the worst possible way.
I was on my laptop after class trying to distract myself and just kept replaying the moment. That pause before he pulled up the sources. The look on his face. The silence.
I have 8 more weeks in this class. EIGHT WEEKS. I've become a cautionary tale about hubris. I'm that student now. The one who tried to correct the professor and got intellectually destroyed.
I'm never raising my hand again.
TL;DR: Confidently corrected my professor in front of 100 students, was completely wrong, he proved it with sources, I now have to show up to class for 8 more weeks as a living cautionary tale.
EDIT: Okay I'm seeing all the comments so let me clear some things up. The concept was about the bystander effect - I'd read that it was basically debunked and told the professor that, but he showed us the original Darley and Latané studies plus more recent meta-analyses that show it's way more nuanced than "debunked." I didn't include details originally because I was embarrassed and typed this up right after class while still dying inside lol. Also to the people saying professors don't pull up sources mid-lecture - mine does this constantly, he's one of those guys who has everything bookmarked and ready to go. Anyway I talked to him after and he was cool, said he was glad I was actually reading about the material even if I got it wrong. Appreciate everyone who was nice about this, I definitely learned my lesson about how to phrase things better