By Professor
Doom
It’s so hard not to point at the many
failings of accreditation when looking at higher education today. Once again,
I’m going to point out more of the madness, and I’ll try to refrain from
discussing how if accreditation had anything to do with education, the insanity
would not be possible in accredited institutions.
A high-powered Educationist was paid to come on campus, and help us
learn how to teach better. Most of the advice was the usual idiotic stuff from
Ph.D.s in education: “give more extra credit”, “give more credit for
attendance”, “give more credit for plagiarism”, and other insights that really
don’t take years of graduate school to learn.
Then I got an e-mail from
the Educationist: “For my research, can you identify the parts of your course
that students have trouble with? We want to focus on those parts to provide
better education in future courses.”
My reply: “Sure. Systems
of linear equations in three vaiables (sic). Inverses of non-linear functions.
The difference quotient. Oh, and applications of exponential and logarithmic
functions.”
Educationist: “Thanks!
This will really help.”
Next semester:
Administration: “To
improve retention, you need to remove the following from your course:
1.
systems of linear equations in three vaiables (again, sic).
2.
Inverses of non-linear
functions.
3.
The difference quotient.
4.
Applications of exponential and logarithmic functions.”
--note the typo was preserved.
In the past, I’ve pointed out how
administration, drunk with power and willing to sacrifice anything in higher
education in the name of growth, can simply order material removed from
courses. Sometimes this is done in a “subtle” manner, such as firing any
faculty that tries to cover courses in a normal way, and sometimes less subtle,
by explicitly altering the course syllabi. What’s happening in community
colleges is unhinged from what they say they are doing in writing for this reason; the paper classes fraud at UNC
isn’t exceptional at all.
Administration can also simply remove
courses, even basic courses, from the curriculum. When push comes to shove, administration can even shut down
entire departments:
“…these regional public
universities may have no departments of English, physics, or history—nor a host of other programs often associated with “college,”
I admit, not everyone needs to know physics,
although a “university” without physics makes about as much sense as a universe
without physics. History, too, is not something everyone needs to know in
detail, but removing it entirely seems odd. Is there less history now, than
there used to be? The whole point of a local university is to have a place of
readily available experts, it’s rough to see such wide swaths of knowledge
being deleted by an administrator.
And English? Seriously? That’s kind of a
critical thing, at least in an American university. Perhaps administration
isn’t familiar with the language, but it’s been rather important for the last
century or two…and, again, it seems like a local university should have experts
in the local language. Perhaps the plan is to outsource English knowledge to
India?
I’d be embarrassed to be at a university
lacking such basic fields of knowledge, but I grant that I’m not in Minnesota
or the District of Columbia, so I guess it’s not my place to say such things.
Even if I was faculty there, it still would not be my place, however, because
educators and scholars no longer have a say about what’s important in our
centers of education and scholarly pursuits.
University of District of Columbia,
despite shutting down such basic fields, still sees no need to cut athletics. Accreditation is
looking into the warped priorities there, I admit, but regular readers of my
blog know how irrelevant accreditation is in such matters.
Now, keep in mind, English and such will
still be taught at the schools…the students need to have some basic
preparation. But, instead of full time faculty, minimally paid adjuncts will be
used instead. But what of the tenured faculty there, you ask?
“Tenured faculty have a job for life!” is
the cry, but as I’ve shown many times in this blog, tenure means basically
nothing. Tenure does protect the faculty, a tiny bit, but tenure agreements do
allow for “financial need” and other reasons for firing. In this case, when the
department goes, so does the tenured faculty. Neat, right?
Administration gives
itself huge pay raises and hires more support staff, causing a financial need,
and responds by firing the tenured faculty. “Job for life,” indeed.
I have pretty mixed emotions about
whether tenure should be allowed, but as long as tenure means “we can fire you
and hire someone else to do a laughable approximation of your job whenever we
want, for 10% of the pay, and we’ll pocket the difference”, I just don’t see
how people can claim tenure grants much job protection at all.
When money was gushing into higher
education, administration awarded themselves huge pay raises, and granted
themselves massive support staffs. But, economic times are hard, despite what
mainstream media says. As institutions of higher education come into financial
difficulty, they naturally have to cut back, and that’s perfectly reasonable.
The problem is that all the cutbacks come from education, and not the
department of Education. It’s rare to see an article hit the nail on the head,
but this one sure does:
There’s balance, here, I admit. When
wealth came pouring into universities via the student loan scam, none of it was
shared with faculty, whose pay has been frozen for decades. Instead, all the wealth
went to administration. Now we have the opposite-of-wealth, none of which comes
down on administration. Balance, yes, fairness, no.
While it’s no surprise that faculty, who
have no say in education at the university, aren’t going to have much say about
anything else going on there, the vision of what administration wants higher
education to become is frightening:
MSUM and UDC’s new
vision—whose implementation will be closely watched by hundreds of institutions
with similar profiles—is not a university at all. It is a ghost town with quads
and a gourmet cafeteria, one that consists of amenities, sports, and administrators—but
no faculty.
It really is important to understand the
messages being sent from our fully accredited state institutions, like UNC,
UDC, and MSUM: state universities are ok with completely bogus coursework
offered by campuses that have no interest in anything that remotely resembles
the education of even a few decades ago. Instead, the only interest will be in
grabbing as much of that student loan scam money as possible.
And so, just one more swing at
accreditation:
Read your latest article on rense.com about wholesale firings of tenured faculty at some universities. This will put the nail in the coffin of post-secondary education for most Americans.
ReplyDeleteI dunno if it's "the" nail, but it's certainly another. "The" nail was student loan scam being supported by the Federal government.
Delete