By Professor Doom
The mainstream
media’s narrative really seems to be that tenure, and not the takeover by
administrators (and social justice warriors), is a big part of the collapse of
higher education.
Hey, I realize
that “job for life” does sound like it has immense potential for abuse but
compared to the abuse administrators already deliver to higher education, every
single day, it’s hard to be concerned about tenure.
It takes at least
7 years of perfect scholarship to even have a chance of tenure, while administrators
get endless promotions and pay raises no matter how horrifically they fail. Even if tenure
weren’t already a dying institution (most
teachers in higher ed are poverty-wage-no-benefits adjuncts as it is), it’s
still not a concern, as tenure isn’t “job for life.” Even with decades of
service, you can still lose your job in higher ed quite easily, all admin has
to do is provide
a reason…and the reason can really be as flimsy as “admin
doesn’t want you to have a job anymore.”
Not content to
simply wait for the faculty with tenure to simply die off, states are now
terminating the tenure laws, replacing them with, literally a strongman
to take over.
Two more states
are looking to kill tenure, retroactively even:
The usual
arguments against tenure are trotted out, with little in the way of
counter-argument. Ok, a few counter-arguments are expressed in the comments,
but I want to mention some things that just never seem to get said.
A government representative
explains why we need to get rid of tenure:
“If you’re
doing the right thing as a professor and teaching students to the best of your
ability, why do you need tenure?” asked Representative Rick Brattin,
This is little
different than a usual government request for your private information: if
you’ve done nothing wrong, you’ve nothing to hide, right? The problem of course
is that private information might someday be used against you by someone
unethical, with access to government information.
Similarly, tenure
isn’t necessary when your boss is honest…but that’s a rarity in higher
education today. I’ve seen so many honest faculty members, possessing integrity
and ethics, blasted off campus for trying to do their job with honor. Sure,
yes, doing an honest job with honest bosses would negate the need for tenure
but…honest bosses?
My blog has
around two hundred posts now describing administrative corruption in myriads of
ways. From fiefdoms
with multiple (independent) embezzling schemes occurring in them, from cover-ups
of generational academic fraud programs to simple plundering (to give a
tiny sample of what goes on)…and this representative says we should just trust
admin not to do it anymore?
Doing the right
thing and doing your best work means nothing when you’re working for a guy who
makes his money by abusing the vulnerable, whether it be students or faculty. A
tiny bit of job protection is too much to ask. Really?
Next comes a
better argument against tenure:
“What other
job in the U.S. has protections like that?” Brattin said of tenure.
--this guy
serves one term and gets full salary retirement benefits for life. A bit of
hypocrisy here, I think. Hey, give me full salary with benefits for life after
teaching one year, and I’ll stop defending tenure.
On the
surface, this is a good point but…scholars aren’t the same thing as truck
drivers (the most
common job in the US), waiters, or burger-flippers. I again point out that
tenure is typically rewarded after a decade or so of scholarship…but there’s
more to it than that.
That fast food
restaurant on the corner? It probably won’t be there in 30 years, and those big
trucks don’t stay in service for 30 years or more, either. Universities,
however, are far, far, more enduring, and universities lasting centuries, even a
thousand years, are far more common than most every business around.
Universities, even more so than governments, have a sense of permanency to
them…thus it’s not so unreasonable to give scholars some level of permanency as
well.
But wait, there’s
more.
Universities have
(more accurately, “had”) a strong record of integrity to them, and, at least in
the past, took their responsibilities to preserve, generate, and spread
knowledge very seriously. They honestly helped humanity, and did good work.
It’s quite common for people to give huge gifts to universities…say, how often has
someone died and left a few million bucks to a local McDonalds?
On the other
hand, such gifts to universities are common, and, in the past, the gifts were
used to further the university mission. Now, you can literally give
$4,000,000 to a university, and administrators will spend $100,000 on the
mission, and fritter the rest away into their checking accounts.
Tenured faculty,
bound to the institution, would invest those gifts wisely, because tenured
faculty were scholars dedicated to the institution, interested in doing more
than merely helping themselves. Our institutions are controlled now by an
administrative caste that wanders from institution to institution, plundering
as much as they can before moving on.
The only thing
that’s kept even a small amount of integrity in higher education is the remnant
of dying tenured faculty, keeping a death grip on integrity and standards…it’s
cutting into the plundering.
So, yes, tenure
isn’t in most other jobs…but other jobs don’t last a thousand years, and don’t
do work good enough to generate gifts, which over time
can add up to billions.
“This is a terribly dangerous idea,” he said of eliminating tenure. “Tenure doesn’t prevent termination for just cause, but it prevents the discipline or termination of a faculty member who teaches or conducts research in areas that are controversial or politically unpopular.”
I’ve seen faculty
fired for asking admin to steal even a little bit less, but let’s pretend
that’s not, ultimately, what this is about. Tenure is even more important today
than it has been in the past.
Our campuses have
turned into echo chambers, reciting fake news as it’s been fed to us by
established fake news sources. Because tenure is dying, there’s a culture of
terror on campus that tells faculty repeatedly “don’t dare speak
out against the echo.” There are literally
entire series of articles by academics so terrified to speak out against what’s
going on in higher education that they must speak anonymously.
I suspect that if
we brought tenure back to where it used to be common, instead of driving it to
extinction, our campuses would return to being places of open discourse and
true investigation of actual knowledge…instead of scholars skulking in the
shadows secretively doing what little they can.
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