By Professor Doom
Higher education underwent a major shift in
how our institutions are staffed. In the past, universities were staffed and
run by a relatively stable caste of faculty, giving all they can to establish
the reputation of the institution they were tied to. Today there are two
castes: faculty and administrator. Both view their time on campus as very
temporary. The faculty are temporary because they’ve been stripped of job
security. Administrators are temporary because they are plunderers: once
they’ve taken everything they can from the institution, they move on to another
place to victimize.
There are remnants
of the old days, devoting their lives to institutions, but they are dying off.
Alas, these elders don’t realize the game has changed, and still do what was so
common back when institutions were deserving of loyalty: they leave a big gift
to the institution in their will.
So it was with
librarian Robert Morin, who after nearly 50 years of service to the University
of New Hampshire left a very nice sum in his will: nearly $4 million. Of this
money, he asked that at least $100,000 be spent on the library, and trusted
administration to handle the rest of the gift, to “spend it wisely for their
students.” Yes, he actually trusted administrators.
Sucker.
- $2.5 million toward an expanded career center for students and alumni;
- $1 million toward a video scoreboard for the new football stadium;
- $100,000 to Dimond Library, to provide "scholarships for work-study students, support staff members who continue their studies in library science and fund the renovation of one of the library's multimedia rooms."
That’s right,
admin spent the barest of bare minimum on what the librarian loved, and will
blow the rest on frivolities. He only asked that at least $100,000 go to his
beloved library…and that’s the bare minimum admin will spend, of his money.
There’s no administrator at UNH who cares enough about education to think a
library deserves more than the barest of bare minimums.
The $2.5 million
on the expanded career center is a waste. I’ve seen this before, and I know
this money will be spent on hiring deanlings and lavishly furnishing
administrative offices. I know, in theory, this might help students, but please
understand on the face of it that the “career center” does nothing for
education.
You really want
to help students get a job? Don’t outfit fancy offices and hire deanlings with
titles like Vice President of Diversity Career Studies. Instead, upgrade your training facilities, hire top
quality teachers, increase standards, and promote how you’re training the best
in the country. Then you won’t even need a career center, because employers
will come to you—quality job
training is how unaccredited schools stay in business, after all.
Don’t those ideas sound like they’ll help students more than fancy offices? The
“leaders” running our institutions can’t even dream of such ideas, because
they’re plunderers, and nothing more. It would take hard work and real
competence to build a quality jobs training program…it’s easier just to take
the money.
At least the
career center is a smokescreen, the $1 million dollars being pissed away on a
scoreboard for sportsball is pure insult. I’m hardly the only one noticing the
twisted priorities here:
Cortese also notes that the school's football stadium recently reopened after a $25 million renovation.
Remember when
$4,000,000 was a lot of money? Now it barely scratches the cost of renovations
on the sportsball stadium, renovations which, apparently, didn’t even include
the scoreboard.
A man devotes his
life to an institution, gives them what used to be a staggering sum, and admin
repays his generosity by giving the merest pittance to what he loved most: the
school library. Even their “thank you” rings hollow:
When we
asked a university representative if the bequest will result in anything being
named for Morin, Erika Mantz, the school's director of media relations, noted
that "a bench in the courtyard outside the library was inscribed with his
name."
Well,
that’s something, I guess, though many universities will sell you a bench with
plaque for a few thousand bucks. A scoreboard…I bet not one reader in a hundred
can even name the UNH team. Perhaps they have multiple teams? I don’t even
know, and, like 99.9999% of the people in the world, don’t care.
"Did
you hear about the scoreboard?"
"Yeah. I'll be paying my student loans off until I'm fifty, and they spent a million bucks on a ****ing SCOREBOARD?"
If you gave
millions of dollars to educators, they’d spend that money on education, taking
pride in a job well done. Whatever they built with that money would lead to a
better school; educators who are tied to a school are motivated to make this
happen. People seeing how gifts led to a better school would in turn provide
gifts of their own.
Higher
education is so demented now, and so much of the dementation has to do with its
control by people who are not even remotely educators. Now I want to get to the
real message UNH just sent to everyone thinking of giving money to them:
DO NOT SEND THEM MONEY
The money was
given to administrators, whose only purpose is to blow through the money frivolously,
spending only the bare minimum on things that would help education. Anyone
thinking about making a donation, and considering what they just did with this
huge gift, is snapping the checkbook shut. Yes, admin’s stupid decision will
mean there will be fewer, far fewer, gifts like this in the future, but the administrators
at UNH don’t care: having taken all they can, they’ll be long gone before
having to deal with the consequences of their plundering.
If you want to
help higher education, at this point, you’re better off just handing money
directly to a student. Donate even $4,000,000 to a university, and you’ll be
lucky if any student anywhere gets even a single nickel’s worth of benefit. So
much good could have been done with that money, and the educator in me grieves
to see such a waste.
Please understand,
the leadership of UNH is not particularly special in their wanton disregard for
education, or even decency. Most every institution is now run by an
administrative caste indistinguishable from UNH’s self-called “leadership.” And
so, as much as I’d like to help education, I must advise any who will listen:
do not donate money to our institutions of higher education. The money simply
will not be spent on education.
No comments:
Post a Comment