And so begins the end of my career as faculty in higher
education.
Before I dive down the rabbit hole of what’s really going
for most college students, I need to plant an important seed.
One detail not fully addressed in the sordid Sandusky affair
concerns the years and years where he was allowed to engage in his
“inappropriate” behavior despite witnesses reporting it to administration on
multiple occasions. Administrators have two key goals, which trump all other
considerations: retention and growth. Retention means keeping students in the
system as much as possible, and a professor having low (with administration
defining “low”) retention will generally not keep his job. As the easiest way
to lose a student is to fail a student, “Failure
is not an option” has taken on new meaning in higher education. Growth
generally means growth of the student base, as more students means a larger
institution, and a larger institution means more administrative pay; thus are
admission standards annihilated nowadays.
So, it was no grand conspiracy that administrators would
cover up even the most grotesque of behavior on campus. The scandal, if
revealed, could easily drive students away, reducing both retention and growth.
It was no conspiracy…administrators were merely doing their job, nothing more.
But here’s the thing missed in this debacle: administrators
are not physically attached to a single school. There’s a bit of a revolving
door in higher education, an administrative career is marked by going to an
institution, improving retention and growth, and then being hired/promoted to
another institution. Job descriptions for open positions almost invariably
describe how candidates must have demonstrated success in previous positions.
There’s nothing special about the administration of Penn
State any more than the administration of NYU, LSU, or UCLA. This behavior
would’ve been covered up anywhere else.
The administrators at Penn State were not some good ol’ boys
with the same last name or with 20 years of experience working together,
they’re a collection of administrators that have all moved up through the
system the same way via numerous institutions, through improving retention and
growth, sacrificing everything else about education for these goals and these
goals alone. Thus, like an ancient Greek phalanx, each administrator knew what
to do without there necessarily being any specific order given: retention and
growth are paramount, sodomization of prepubescent boys in the showers on
campus is nothing next to those goals.
Now we come to the seed I must plant: if a simple random
sample of administrators has so little concern for integrity and human decency
that implicitly condoning the sodomizing of children does not cause even one
administrator to resign in disgust over the course of years, is it possible
that their void of integrity fails the cause of education in other ways?
Please, think about that as I detail all the ways that
college has changed due to enforced policy changes from the administrative
caste.
No comments:
Post a Comment