By Professor Doom
It truly is
astonishing how common the racism and sexism is on campus today. Oh, our
leaders prattle on about diversity and equality, but it takes little effort to
discover they don’t know the meanings of these words.
In times past,
they did know what the words meant…but being racists and sexists themselves,
they made sure to advance racist and sexist policies in a covert way. So, there
was no written policy about hiring, but you better believe most (probably
every) campus in this country gave priority hiring to females and “protected
minorities” as they were called. I don’t make this claim lightly, as every
hiring committee I’ve been on used the gender or race of the applicant as part
of the decision making process, stinking “equal opportunity employer” notices
be damned. We’d put the equal opportunity notice in writing to be sure, but
there were many unwritten policies we used.
It was all done
with a wink and a nod in the past, but bottom line today’s administrators and
faculty aren’t nearly so clever as before, and certainly not clever enough to
do things with a wink and a nod. So, now we have documented job applications for
physicists or university
admin which are clearly racist and/or sexist (particularly against
whites), even math faculty positions
requiring specific political views (social
justice warriors only).
Now, obviously,
this behavior is still wrong, and eventually someone in admin with half a brain
shows up (takes a while) and points that you can’t be so blatant, and knows that
you can’t make such behavior as written policy. It’s all wink and a nod, you
know.
Time and again we
get to see this stuff in writing, particularly racist stuff, but today we’ll
focus on the blatant, and very common, sexism on campus:
Isn’t it
interesting how this stuff never seems to hit the mainstream news? Anyway,
let’s see what prompted the professor to set up a sexist grading policy:
…he wanted to “test the water” to see if this approach could
“attract female students into future classes” and help correct chronic gender
imbalances in his field…
It’s only one
sentence, but it says much about the madness infecting higher ed right now.
First, this “test
the water” thing. I’ve been forced to listen to, and adopt, so many cockamamie,
clearly stupid ideas that I actually see the professor’s thinking here. Most of
these ideas are so obviously bad, so lacking anything to do with education,
that absolutely, “screw it, let’s just give higher grades to the females” makes
sense in this context. I mean, it’s not like integrity or decency ever seems to
get in the way of ideas, time and again I’ve seen admin propose new policies which
could only come from a depraved mind.
Second, the
“attract female students” thing. Again, I’ve been bombarded time and again with
programs to attract female students, and, again, never has integrity been a
factor in any of those programs. So, again, I see the professor’s point: “let’s
just flat out promise females better grades” seems like perfectly good bribery,
little different than, say, a missionary murdering all the adults in a village
just so he can claim credit for taking care of many orphans. Honest, higher ed
is just that messed up now that this sort of deranged thinking is consistent
with other ideas in higher ed.
Finally, the
“chronic gender imbalances” thing. Again, this concept was hammered into my
skull many times when I was at questionable schools. I couldn’t ask questions
there, but this is my blog, so I will ask three obvious questions: “Who says
the imbalance is a bad thing?,” “Why will the world be a better place if we
change the imbalance?,” and “Do we have any evidence what balance would be
optimal, so that we can even say there’s an imbalance now?” These questions are
never, ever, asked in higher ed, or if they are you can’t hear them over the
endless shouting to fix the gender imbalance.
What kind of
imbalance are we looking at here, anyway?
…classes have “one or two female students” on average
in a class of 20 to 30, and they are “not doing well,” he told The
Fix in an email. These women will probably have to “repeat the courses
or leave the program” without a grade boost…
It always turned my stomach when admin
would heap praise upon some faculty for “successfully passing” (I still hear
the voice saying that abominable phrase in my head) some female or protected
minority. Truth be told, I’d sometimes get that praise as well; it still turned
my stomach. I passed, and pass, students because they demonstrate they
understand the material, their genitals or skin color have nothing to do with
it, not that admin sees much beyond race and gender.
Of course, I’m
not a racist or sexist like your typical college administrator, so they saw
nothing offensive about praising me for passing people of certain races or
genders. But I always felt uncomfortable with such praise, and am grateful to
no longer be at a place where I must be subjected to it.
To the school’s
credit, they stepped in and stopped the professor from overtly giving female students better grades just for being female:
…the University of Akron “follows both the law and its
policies and does not discriminate on the basis of sex,” and that Liu “has been
advised accordingly, and he has reaffirmed his commitment to adhering to these
strict standards.”
So, yes, in
writing, the university here will follow the law but…the professor’s policy
didn’t happen in a vacuum. He didn’t wake up one day and say “We need for
females passing my courses and this must be done in any way possible, integrity
is not a factor here.” He got a memo with that directive.
I assure the
gentle reader, the professor was told many times how important it was to get
more females in his classes. He was also told many times how important it was
that females get better grades in classes. He saw with his own eyes that
academic integrity was of no concern to how any administrative policy could be
fulfilled.
He saw it so
often that, much like my examples in the beginning of the article, he was under
the impression that sexism favoring females was perfectly legal, possibly even
moral, and so he adopted the kind of policy admin was telling him to adopt.
His mistake was
putting that policy in writing. But, I’m sure now that admin has spoken (not
written!) to him, he’ll do that sort of thing with a wink a nod.
Because that’s how it’s been done in higher ed
for decades now.
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