More Academic Nonsense
Moonbattery points to an editorial, in of all places, the NYT, which begins:
I RECENTLY did some research for a satirical novel set at a university. The idea was to have a bunch of gags about how colleges prostitute themselves to improve their U.S. News & World Report rankings and keep up a healthy supply of tuition-paying students, while wrapping their craven commercialism in high-minded-sounding academic blather.
I would keep coming up with what I thought were pretty outrageous burlesques of this stuff and then run them by one of my professor friends and he’d say, Oh, yeah, we’re doing that.
I knew as soon as I read that that this was going to be a good read. You have to feel sorry for this guy. He was trying to write a satire, and every insane idea he came up with was already being implemented at some university or another. The prize, however, goes to Case Western, for their SAGES program:
My final straw came when a friend at Case Western Reserve University (now referred to as Case, after their consultant concluded that all great universities have single-word names) sent me a packet of information on the university’s new showcase undergraduate seminar program. Called SAGES (this supposedly stands for Seminar Approach to General Education and Scholarship), the program offers as an essential component of its core intellectual experience an upscale cafe that serves Peet’s Coffee and is “staffed by baristas whose expertise in preparing espresso is matched only by their authoritative knowledge of all things SAGES.”
As the program’s Web site explains (complete with footnotes, bibliography and quotes from the urban theorist Jane Jacobs): “In the bustling personal-but-impersonal rhythms of campus activity, as in the streets of a big city, proprietors of public establishments occupy a special position… The SAGES cafe staff are patently not interested in providing grades or passing judgment.” And, not only that, but “there are no compromises that would undermine the quality of our drinks…. Our chai latte is made not from a bottled concentrate, but from a fresh-brewed base made from scratch every day on site.”
As a model of pandering to students in the guise of lofty academic purpose, I thought that was pretty hard to top. Then I started reading the 92-page guide Case has created for teachers of these seminars.
Okay, you knew multiculturalism/diversity/identity politics idiocy had to raise its head somewhere, didn’t you?
If students fidget, talk or walk out of class, the guide advises seminar leaders not to “manage” such behaviors, but to explore their underlying causes. Instructors must remember that to such characteristically American cultural beliefs as the importance of morality, rationality and personal responsibility, there are equally valid alternatives that must be respected.
Instructors must be wary of spurious objectivity, such as a 0-100 grading scale; much better is a 0-5 scale, or, best of all, a check, check-plus, check-minus scale. And finally, if students do not contribute to discussions at all, seminar leaders should “make space for silence.”
And, no doubt, make space for failure, utter disinterest in class, refusing to do assignments, and all those other equally valid alternative non-American cultural beliefs that must be respected.
Institutionalize these nutjobs.
Robert:
In addition to the pure nuttery of the SAGES program in and of itself, they have to serve Peet’s Coffee? That stuff tastes like it was brewed out of something swept off the floor of an archeological dig. But it is made in Berkeley, I guess, so it fits.
Also, since when are morality, rationality, and personal responsibility “American cultural beliefs”? Aren’t those characteristic of every civilized society, western or otherwise? And they are supposed to respect the “alternatives” — like amoralily, irrationalily, and irresponsibility?
And I actually work in this field?
April 27, 2006, 3:39 pmThe Constructivist:
If you think that’s bad, check out what the DoE is advocating as a “fix,” or, better, read Michael Berube’s parody.
April 28, 2006, 6:28 amjeffrey Quick:
You knew you’d hear from me, and it would have been sooner had I been able to get into your site.
The SAGES Cafe is about the most trivial part of the program. Having seen the program at work, I am of two minds about it.
The positive is that it gets the kids researching and writing, which was its intent. How sucessfully it does that depends on the prof and the library support. this program was implemented without any additional library funding. The main library gives only general guidance. But here at the music library, we’ve found articles for people, but have meticulously described the search process, so they know exactly what goes into a catalog search, RILM, JSTOR etc. and can do it for themselves. It also gets freshmen music majors into the library, which is kind of a first. We had a course focusing on Magic Flute and Turandot, and the class taking a field trip to Cleveland Opera for the Puccini…which was the first live opera most of them had seen.
OTOH, a lot of the paper topics are just wack…Magic Flute as an allegory of the Illuminati against the Catholic Church. The instructor of this particular section is more concerned about process than end result. Also, students tend to come in with a thesis they want to prove, rather than gathering all information and seeing what it suggests. And it IS very labor-intensive, for faculty and librarians.
April 28, 2006, 1:00 pm