Knock on the door.

First, the fact that the student already shares your political bent
(that's usually where the walk lists come from) means you're not
proselytizing.

And were you actually trying to win converts for your side, you're not
in the classroom, and some might say that it's fine.  I would shy from
that, but I would have absolutely no compunction about knocking on the
door, if the student's a registered democrat in my precinct.

Go on -- knock.  GOTV.  :)

m

-------
"Whatever power the United States Constitution 
envisions for the Executive in its exchanges with 
other nations or with enemy organizations in times 
of conflict, it most assuredly envisions a role 
for all three branches when individual liberties 
are at stake."
---
July 20,2006
US District Court for Northern California
 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Paul Brandon [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Sent: Monday, September 25, 2006 1:27 PM
> To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
> Subject: [tips] Ethical question
> 
> An interesting ethical question:
> If I'm out door knocking for a political candidate and I find 
> one of my students on my list, what do I do?
> --
> The best argument against Intelligent Design is that fact 
> that people believe in it.
> 
> * PAUL K. BRANDON                    [EMAIL PROTECTED]  *
> * Psychology Dept               Minnesota State University  *
> * 23 Armstrong Hall, Mankato, MN 56001     ph 507-389-6217  *
> *                http://krypton.mnsu.edu/~pkbrando/             *
> 
> ---
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> 

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