By Professor
Doom
I’ve written before of the fear that now
pervades the job of a college professor. Say something that can be remotely be
considered criticism, and you’re fired. Say something that students find
offensive, and you risk complaints that could lead to termination. They’re
simple rules, but it’s hard to claim there’s academic freedom or freedom of
speech when you must watch what you say.
I grant that, in times past, professors
(and other people) said some outright offensive things, but nowadays, the only
offensive racists I’ve seen and heard on campus were multiculturalists and diversity
professors.
With all the overt racism removed, we’ve
now moved on to the concept of “microaggression,” where students take offense
at the most ridiculous thing, cry “racism,” and spineless administration
supports the student, even when the aggression is literally so small that it
can’t be seen (hence the name). That’s ok, because that’s the point of
microaggression.
Ridiculous? Absolutely. An example that
didn’t quite make the mainstream news really highlights just how miniscule
these so-called aggressions are:
Now, these are graduate students, and I’ve covered graduate student
protests before.
Absolutely, when this many students protest, you have to consider their claim,
particularly when the class generating complaints is dissertation level: these
students are very close to officially establishing themselves as scholars.
So, what, pray tell, was the micro-insult
being delivered so grievously that students felt the need to complain?
[The professor, Rust] had changed a student’s capitalization of the word
“indigenous” in her dissertation proposal to the lowercase, thus allegedly
showing disrespect for the student’s ideological point of view. Tensions arose
over Rust’s insistence that students use the more academic Chicago Manual of Style for citation
format…
That’s right, folks, we’re now at the
point that professors need to fear student protests over issues of
capitalization and citation style. I totally respect the students’ right to
protest, but this is pretty micro, eh?
The fear doesn’t come from the student
protests, it comes from administration’s response to this level of lunacy.
UCLA’s response to the sit-in was a
travesty of justice. The education school sacrificed the reputation of a
beloved and respected professor in order to placate a group of ignorant
students making a specious charge of racism.
What did they do to this highly
regarded professor with decades of experience?
The administration announced that
Rust would not teach the remainder of the class by himself but would be joined
by three other professors, one of whom, Daniel Solórzano, was the school’s
leading proponent of microaggression theory and critical race theory. This
reorganization implicitly confirmed the charge that Rust was unfit to supervise
“graduate students of color.”
This is really, really, insulting to
the professor. He’s been teaching for decades, but now needs the help of three
in-class commissars supervisors?
Now, I grant that the students are in a
field (racial and gender issues) notorious for complaining about the most
ridiculous things…but every once in a while this field does have something
relevant to say (a stopped clock is correct twice a day, after all).
Complaints, especially mass complaints, should be heard, and considered. In the
past, such complaints were heard by actual faculty, people that cared about
scholarship and education. Today, such complaints are handled by a questionably
highly paid and unquestionably incompetent cadre of professional
administrators, who simply don’t care about education or scholarship.
I’ve pointed out before that higher
education administration seems to thrive on hypocrisy and double standards,
and, again, we see a double standard here. Consider the abuse, the real abuse, that was inflicted on the Roski
students, motivating
faculty to resign as well as the entire graduate class. Admin doesn’t give one
whit about that (no surprise, since the abuse is coming from admin).
Student complaints about being forced not
to capitalize “indigenous” are taken very seriously, on the other hand. The proper response would be to crack a
few heads together acknowledge that
the highly respected professor knows better about capitalization and citation
than the students, and support the guy they hired to train scholars.
Looking at some of the writing of these students, it really seems like they could use
some help with their skills in this regard, especially in writing
understandable prose. I’ll include one line as an example:
“It is, at its most benign,
disingenuous to the next generations of Scholars of Color to not seek material
and systematic changes in this department. It is a toxic, unsafe and
intellectually stifling environment at its current worse.”
I concede I was at one community
college where several faculty really aspired to write at this level of clarity
and correctness, but trying to improve this writing is what education is
supposed to do. Anyway, at UCLA, it’s not a good idea to try to teach students
to write well, apparently:
“Asking for better grammar is
inflammatory in the school,” says an occasional T.A. “You have to give an A or
you’re a racist.
Administration should support the
production of scholars that can write clearly and correctly, and support
faculty that work towards that goal. Admin, of course, did the absolute worst
thing, support the students, with predictable results:
The pattern would repeat itself twice
more at UCLA that fall: students would allege that they were victimized by
racism, and the administration, rather than correcting the students’
misapprehension, penitently acceded to it.
And thus the culture of fear gets even
worse. Now, across the country, people are terrified of saying something
insulting, with the threshold of insult being lowered to literally microscopic
levels. How on Earth did acts that explicitly cannot be seen as insulting
nevertheless be considered insults?
Even
comedians, usually fearless in what they say in the pursuit of humor, are now too afraid to perform on campuses. In days of yore, comedians used to
make pretty good money and further their careers performing on college
campuses, and now they know doing so is a major risk to their career. “Opening
your mouth on campus” is now dangerous.
The American higher educational system
used to be the envy of the world, and, to some extent, would-be scholars from
other countries still come here for higher education. What do these people
think of the environment created by administration?
Foreign students are particularly
shell-shocked by the school’s climate. “The Asians are just terrified,” says a
recent graduate. “They walk into this hyper-racialized environment and have no
idea what’s going on. Their attitude in class is: ‘I don’t want to talk. Please
don’t make me talk!’ ”
Please, the gentle reader needs to
understand that the creation of this environment will have long lasting
repercussions across American campuses. If we had leaders interested in
fostering scholarship and education instead of feathering their
own nests for short term gain, we could easily stop this.
This whole matter should have been
resolved with some restrained laughter and administration telling students to
get back to work. Instead, it just gets escalated and escalated:
“…Rust’s employers presented him with
a choice: if he agreed to stay off the education-school premises for the
remainder of the academic year, they would not pursue disciplinary charges
against him. The administration then sent around a letter to students, alerting
them that the school would be less dangerous—for a while, at least—with Rust
out of the picture.”
--by the way, Rust is 79 years old, with
many awards and commendations for his work in this field. And, apparently, he’s
a threat and a racist because of his citation style preferences…
The article I’m quoting from goes into much more extensive detail
on how vile microaggression theory is, and I encourage the interested reader
(with plenty of time) to peruse it further.
Simply asking students to use a long
established citation style can lead to a professor getting kicked off campus.
Is this not yet another sign that something has gone horribly, horribly, wrong
in higher education?
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