By Professor Doom
A few posts back, I praised
Oberlin College for standing up to black student demands to be automatically
passed in all their courses. Other institutions were given similar demands, and
caved, but Oberlin had a spine.
So many times
I’ve seen lone faculty with integrity, the very few with spines, stand up for
integrity, only to be destroyed, and now I could very well see the parallel in
higher education.
I honestly
thought administration at Oberlin, by being adults and telling students “we’re
here to help you get an education, not to rubber stamp whatever you want to
call effort” would honestly put an end to the silliness, that students upon
(finally) having higher education administration act with integrity, would get
back to work.
I was wrong.
I struggled with a
title for this essay, as nothing really captures the student response to admin
not treating them like pampered customers and telling the students to take
responsibility for their own actions. Instead of heading towards adulthood, the
students doubled down on their foolish behavior.
The
students submitted a massive list of demands. While the list of demands
(at this time) has nigh 90,000 views, I don’t encourage the gentle reader to
click and read. Allow, instead, for me to highlight and discuss the
implications of this list.
As you will
see these are not polite requests, but concrete and unmalleable demands.
As much as I grieve for what’s happening in higher education, I take some
small pleasure in the students’ lack of respect for administrators. Time and
again I’ve seen administration treat faculty in deeply non-collegial,
disrespectful ways, and faculty could do nothing about it but lower eyes and
back away meekly. The students are starting to pick up on this, and, honest,
children do learn by example, and see no reason to treat with respect an
administration that doesn’t treat others with respect.
We DEMAND a 4% annual increase in Black
student enrollment
from EACH of the Americas, the Caribbean and
continent of Africa starting in 2016 to accumulate to a 40% increase by 2022.
And again we’re seeing what goes around comes around. Admin has totally
supported race/gender politics at campuses throughout the country, and the
students have noticed: actual accomplishment is irrelevant, advancement is now
about race and gender. Curiously, it looks like the students are a little off
on their compound interest calculation (assuming that’s what they’re doing
here), as 4% increase compounded over 7 years is only a 36% increase.
Whatever,
the point is still: the students are asking to adjust the population based not
on content of academic character, but strictly by skin color. The student had
to specify “Black” because otherwise Oberlin could admit many Afrikaners, and
those are quite white, albeit from Africa.
We DEMAND the
creation of a department that focuses on languages of the Africana peoples to
include a minimum of one language each from the African continent, Caribbean,
and the Americas:
● The continent of Africa: Kiswahili, Igbo,
Yoruba, Hausa/Fulani, Mende, Xhosa, Zulu, Shona, Ndebele, Lingala etc
● The
Americas: Black English, Creole, Gullah Dialect etc
● The Caribbean: Haitian Creole,
Jamaican Patois, etc.
---one of the more ridiculous demands, and that’s a high bar. I’m not
denigrating these languages, mind you, but the feasibility of finding a
specialist in Jamaican Patois, for example, much less filling classes on that
“language” on a regular basis, is simply nonexistent.
The
document also demands that many key administrative positions be held by Black
administrators. I wonder if they’ll accept people that simply self-identify as
black? I hear that’s sufficient to advance far
in the NAACP…at least until they find out you’re genetically
white, regardless of self-identification (note: the document doesn't make it clear if "Black" and "black" are necessarily the same thing). Why is self-identifying a gender
regardless of genetics acceptable to the point of being “heroic,” but not race?
I guess that’s a question for a different blog.
There are
similar demands that students should influence who becomes music faculty…I
know, it’s a cliché, but I’m not sure young people should get to immediately
determine validity of music, at an academic level. Let the young people study
and learn and demonstrate that they understand…oh wait, that’s the successful
way higher education was run before the administrative takeover where most
everything academic is now decided more by whimsy and identity politics than by
tradition and common sense.
Again, it
really seems like the students have a surprisingly subtle understanding of what’s
happened to education.
Hmm, I
should mention that part of me wonders if this is a hoax. If it is, it’s a darn
good one, and I sure don’t see students at Oberlin disavowing this document.
Some have picked apart a few grammatical errors, but this is a 15 page
document, obviously hastily prepared…a few errors mean nothing.
We DEMAND
an online
database that outlines the deadline, dates, and forms critical for the successful academic journey of
Black students.
While many demands are
outright ridiculous, why doesn’t such a database already exist? So many of my
students have been forced to stay on campus a year or more longer than they
needed to, not because of any lack of talent, but because the exact forms and
such that needed to be completed were never explained to them.
For the
readers new to my blog, allow me to quickly explain why administration has no
problem opening up $100,000 administrative positions and granting themselves huge
pay raises, but haven’t spent the few thousand dollars necessary to provide a
nice online walkthrough on how to graduate, at Oberlin and at many other
campuses: administration is focused entirely on growth, and many administrators
receive bonuses the more students they trap on campus.
If this
isn’t a hoax, I bet these students are getting some good advice from someone on
the inside, because very few students understand how the “retention is
everything” game is played.
Who could
the insider be?
We DEMAND
the allocation of resources geared towards shifting the institutional climate
so that Black faculty, administration and staff can thrive and not have to
engage in the invisible labor that we know is an important part of their work.
This
reference to “invisible labor” really points to the insider being a faculty
member. Most people think that faculty primarily stand in front of a class for
2 hours a week, and then go home, but there really is much more (often unpaid)
labor in a faculty job than that…I’ve avoided such discussion because, hey,
bigger fish to fry. But I doubt 1 student in 100 thinks faculty do much more
than teach, when the reality is teaching duties constitute a minority of
responsibility for many faculty.
The
students specifically list faculty that should be granted tenure immediately,
or put on the tenure track…if I was being extremely suspicious, I’d look
carefully at the names on that list to identify the insider. I also note that
no particular student name is attached to this list of demands…again, faculty
know full well what happens when administration knows your name and, well, it’s
not good.
The demands
go on interminably. There’s even a list of specific administrators to fire,
including the Vice President of Strategic Initiatives, Director of Student
Health and Counseling Services, Accounts Payable Supervisor, among others.
Considering Oberlin has under 3,000 students and yet still merits people with
such titles, the gentle should use these titles to understand how incredibly
bloated our administrative caste is at this and other institutions.
Ok, it’s
time for administration to prove their previous actions were not simply a
fluke, and that they understand how integrity works. Even though some of these
demands are quite reasonable, so many are ridiculous to the point of laughable
extortion, that this is the only proper response the President should give:
“Obviously, we at Oberlin have failed, and failed
completely in our mission of education. Continuing to function as a school
would not be acting with integrity, and so we are closing down immediately, as
our final act to help our students.”
Of course, that’s
not the response administration gave. Instead, they’re going to have a meeting
in early January.
Maybe then
they’ll announce they’re closing down the school? I don’t recommend the gentle
reader hold his breath. To judge by the administrative response so far, no
breath-holding at all, please:
So it’s
nigh Christmas, and I find myself playing the role of Grinch. I’m taking back
the praise I gave to Oberlin earlier…and will hold it until I know exactly how
Oberlin will respond to these often hysterical demands.
I strongly
suspect the student demands will be mostly met. Suppose they are. Knowing that
a degree from Oberlin will merely assert one’s skin color is black, does the
gentle reader suppose such a degree will be worth anything at all?
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