Showing posts with label universities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label universities. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 10, 2024

Fangirl - by Rainbow Rowell


Cath and her twin sister Wren are starting college at the University of Nebraska - Lincoln, but in different dorms. Cath is less than thrilled about this arrangement and is more than a bit intimidated by her roommate Reagan. At least she still has her fanfiction to disappear into. Cath and Wren used to write Simon Snow fanfiction together, but Wren lost interest and Cath now writes on her own. 

After getting special permission to take a 300-level fiction writing class Cath meets Nick and the two become writing partners. Nick works at Love Library "(That was the actual name; thank you for your donation, Mayor Don Lathrop Love)" shelving books, although he clearly doesn't take the job seriously enough. He left a cart full of books at the end of his shift because he was doing his homework instead of shelving. When Cath points this out he assures her that "the morning girl can do it. It'll remind her that she's alive". This turns out to be a bit of foreshadowing as we discover that Nick is all to happy to take credit for work that women do.

Cath mostly holds her own in the upper-level writing class, but is taken aback by an accusation of plagiarism when she uses some of her fan fiction as a basis for one of the writing assignments. Her professor is understanding, but will not change the failing grade, or allow Cath to rewrite the assignment. I disagree that what Cath turned in was plagiarized. If she had turned in the same story and used different character names her professor would probably never have realized. Also, I turned in a similar assignment myself as a graduate student (re-wrote a scene from a novel from a different character's point of view). My professor loved it. I got an A.

Cath spends a lot of time in the library, and her full nerd-dom is clear when we discover that she has a bit of a fantasy about "being trapped in a library overnight." She even writes a Simon Snow scene that takes place between the stacks.

Cath finds love (or something like it) with Levi. One of their early bonding experiences involves Cath reading The Outsiders aloud to Levi who has trouble with reading to himself. And really who doesn't love The Outsiders? I've said it before and I'll say it again: reading aloud with another person is never a bad idea. You will always have something to talk about.

Monday, June 14, 2021

The Future of Academic Freedom - by Henry Reichman

I found out about this book when I signed up for a Zoom event with the author (Henry Reichman) through the American Library Association's Intellectual Freedom Round Table

In the book’s foreword Joan Wallach Scott says Reichman "embraces the idea that education exists to advance the common good, measured not in economic terms but as an enhancement of the human spirit; and he is adamant about the importance of protecting the political rights of students and faculty alike to protest inequality and injustice on campus and in the larger society." 

Protests are of course an expression of free speech, as are counter protests. Likewise questioning authority, confronting invited speakers, and challenging those with opposing viewpoints are all legitimate forms of free speech. Exercising one's first amendment right does not prevent others from doing the same.

We are indeed living in interesting times. As librarians are debating the removal of Dr. Seuss books from the shelves, we hear terms like “cancel culture” as well as questions about whether people are even allowed to protest anything anymore. Trigger warnings are expected on syllabi and in presentations. 

Do all University students have the right to feel comfortable at all times? Has social media and political correctness taken away our ability to speak freely in academic settings? Do faculty even have academic freedom anymore? 

What exactly is academic freedom? 

The American Association of University Professors' 1915 Declaration of Principles on Academic Freedom and Academic Tenure included three basic elements: freedom in the classroom; freedom in research; and freedom in extramural utterance. Reichman discussed all three elements in the book and in his Zoom talk.

The focus in any discussion of academic freedom ultimately seems to be on students. As Reichman points out:
Colleges and universities have traditionally been places designed...to make people uncomfortable. Education can and should be joyful, but it should also be challenging, difficult, and sometimes unsettling. Yet increasingly we hear that the faculty's right to academic freedom must be limited by the "right" of students not to be "offended" or unduly disturbed by material or ideas they encounter in and out of class.
The Association of University Professionals’ (AAUP) statement On Trigger Warnings rejects the idea that people have the right to not be offended. "The presumption that students need to be protected rather than challenged in a classroom is at once infantilizing and anti-intellectual.” 

I would also argue that Administration often acts in a way to infantilize faculty and other university employees as well. Reichman quotes Greg Lukianoff to drive the point home.
Campus administrators have been successful in convincing students that the primary goal of the university is to make students feel comfortable. Unfortunately, comfortable minds are often not thinking ones.
Furthermore, ensuring that all students are “comfortable” is an impossible standard. White Supremacists and Black Lives Matter activists cannot both expect that they can speak about their views “comfortably” in the same space. In fact, no one participating either actively or passively in such a space can expect to feel comfortable. That is no reason not to have the discussion.

It is worthwhile to note that students don’t necessarily want a sheltered learning environment either. A Gallup poll on free speech in 2016 found that 78 percent of students favored an "open learning environment" as opposed to a "positive learning environment" that "opposed free speech". 

Free Speech

I liked the idea set forth by Historian L.D. Burnett, who considers her classroom a "rehearsal space" where students can "work through ideas" without worrying that they will "unwillingly be part of someone's snarky narrative". Students and faculty should be able to explore difficult topics in class, and expect to feel uncomfortable doing so, without worrying that they will become the next victims of targeted online harassment campaigns which may threaten their jobs, families, and lives”. 

I find it ironic that social media, which gives us all a platform to express our views, is simultaneously making it more difficult to speak freely. Any mistake, misstep, misinterpretation, or misunderstanding in the classroom (or in research) can be recorded and posted online and literally create life-threating situations for those involved. However, it is equally important to note that the offended students do have the right to express their grievances. "Toleration does not imply acceptance or agreement. The freedom to speak does not give one the right not to be condemned and despised for one's speech." 

Students also have the right to protest speakers they don't like, so long as they don't interfere with the ability of those who do wish to hear them and are free to invite speakers whom they would prefer to hear to campus. They are also free to enter into discourse with any speaker with whom they disagree. It is important to note, however, that there is no requirement that each speaker be "balanced" with one of the opposing viewpoint. 

Should free speech ever be curtailed on campus? 

Reichman discusses the right of faculty to speak freely about political and social issues outside the classroom.
Faculty members who speak as citizens often speak about topics far from their academic specialty. Physicists or engineers, for example, may express controversial views on political or social issues that have no bearing at all on their fitness to teach or conduct research in physics or engineering. 
He gives the example of two engineering professors (one at Northwestern University and the other at California State University, Long Beach) who "publicly advocated Holocaust denial but retained their positions without challenge so long as they did not inject those views into the classroom". 

If however, they had been history professors and expressed those views in class there is an argument to be made for dismissal. In Reichman's presentation he made the ironic statement that "the less you know about a subject the freer you are to talk about it". 

The Problem with Administration 

It is not uncommon in the ivory tower to hear arguments that a university ‘needs to be run like a business’. This is hogwash. I agree with Reichman who sees University Administration and the “students as customers” model as the biggest threat to academic freedom. 

Administration is more concerned with "institutional image" than with truth seeking, even as Administration has the right to express disapproval of faculty speech. 

Moreover, Administration should not "be trusted with the truth-seeking institutions with which they've been entrusted. They are to promote the college as a place of teaching. But they are not teachers." 

This point is illustrated in the book that treats the topic of adjunct (contingent) faculty who do not have the protection of tenure, and who often are left to "cobble together the semblance of a career from a series of part-time jobs". Relying on these workers is a threat to academic freedom, and paradoxically, "adversely affects graduation rates 'with the largest impact being felt at the public master's level institutions'.
Administration at my own University may wish to take heed. 
Academic capitalism's stress on measuring, assessment, and quantification has yielded what David Graeber colorfully calls 'the bullshitization of academic life: that is, the degree to which those involved in teaching and academic management spend more of their time involved in tasks which they secretly - or not so secretly - believe to be entirely pointless. 
So, what are universities for, anyway? 

Well, it’s not “work force” preparation, but lately that has been hard to deny. 

Reichman points out that "most Americans...recognize that colleges and universities play many roles beyond helping graduates obtain a good job". Furthermore, college graduates are likely to change careers several times during their lives, making preparation for specific, narrowly defined jobs a bad administrative decision. 

University of Wisconsin Milwaukee professor Christine Evans explains the importance of a liberal arts education:
The humanities train critical thinkers and citizens. That may be inconvenient for politicians who see their constituents as merely 'work force' but it is definitely good for our democracy, as well as our economy.
Reichman continues with the University of Wisconsin system as a case study. “The University of Wisconsin - Superior suspended nine majors, fifteen minors, and one graduate program in 2017. Affected programs included theatre, sociology, journalism, and political science. Other programs were placed "on warning" and told to make curricular changes to "meet regional needs" and be more "attractive for students". Students protested with sit-ins and gathered over 5,000 petition signatures to overturn the suspensions”. 

Meanwhile, Administration at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point threatened thirteen majors including several in the humanities. At the same time they proposed sixteen new programs "with high- demand career paths". These included marketing, management, graphic design, fire science and computer science. In response the campus Save Our Majors coalition organized the campus' biggest protest since the Vietnam War.

To counter the point, my own alma mater, the University of Maryland Baltimore County (UMBC), recently published this story in which the student profiled (computer science major Jordon Troutman) specifically expresses the importance of the humanities on his studies.
His computer science and math courses have prepared him for the work; so have courses in the liberal arts and his experiences with campus engagement. 
Elective courses in philosophy “helped me understand broadly how to articulate these non-quantitative concepts,” such as fairness, Troutman says. A particular Honors College course about how the media uses faces and how we internalize what the faces represent stuck with him. 
 Reichman quotes Stefan Collini in his work What are Universities for? in explaining that universities are a public good and that knowledge is worth pursuing for its own sake.
A society does not educate the next generation in order for them to contribute to the economy. It educates them in order that they should extend and deepen their understanding of themselves and the world acquiring...kinds of knowledge and skill which will be useful in their eventual employment, but which will no more be the sum of their education than that employment will be the sum of their lives.
Also important to note is that public colleges and universities get only a small percentage of their budget from the state governments, even as the state legislatures attempt to exert ever more control over teaching, learning, and research. 

Reichman memorializes the book to Free Speech Movement activist Reginald Zelnik as well as to Judith Krug - founding director of the American Library Association's Office for Intellectual Freedom. 

I leave my post with this thought (paraphrased from Louis Brandeis): 

More information is better than less information. More speech is better than less speech.

Wednesday, November 18, 2020

Change the Subject - the movie

Change the Subject trailer

I received an email last week letting me know that Indiana University Bloomington was sponsoring a free screening of this film. I had not heard of the documentary before, but I did know the story of the Dartmouth College students who took on the Library of Congress (LoC) in order to have the pejorative catalog subject heading "Illegal Aliens" changed to Undocumented Immigrants. I was surprised to learn that the change has not yet happened (see this page from the Library of Congress Subject Headings). I followed the story at the time and remembered that Republicans in Congress (for the first time ever) decided to get involved with decisions on LoC subject headings. It is not unusual for Library of Congress Subject Headings to change as language and mores change, but in this case some lawmakers decided that this was too much and amounted to "political correctness run amok". Calls were made for more transparency in the process for changing LoC Subject headings (again, this had never been the case before). 

What both parties here understand is this: words matter. Language matters. 

The film follows the students from the CoFired (Coalition for Immigration Reform and Equality at Dartmouth) Student Group as they go from discovering that the subject heading exists to talking to the College librarians about it (and librarians' own awakening about the term) to the students' realization that the heading did not originate with Dartmouth's Baker-Berry Library but rather that the headings came from the authority of the Library of Congress and so they took their case to the United States Capitol.  

The term inspirational was used to describe the students. 

Inspirational? 

Yes. 

These students in fact inspired me to contact the editors of the popular Opposing Viewpoints database (Cengage) in 2017 when I discovered that the term "illegal aliens" was used as a heading in the database. I pointed out that the Library of Congress was considering changing their subject heading and that surely the editors of the database were aware of this. Furthermore, I suggested that the heading was judgmental, which seemed to be contrary to the purpose of the Opposing Viewpoints database - to inspire discussion. Unlike the Library of Congress Cengage did indeed "change the subject" after I sent them my message. The term "Undocumented Immigrants" is now used in the database.

Screenshot from Opposing Viewpoints database

I will continue to follow this story. Perhaps we will see a change in 2021.


Tuesday, August 18, 2020

The SEAL's Rebel Librarian - by Anne Calhoun

 

August is Read-A-Romance Month, and while I don't read many romances, I do find them to be good escape. I also like to be thematic, so each August I do a bit of summer reading in the genre. Earlier this month I read some LGBTQ YA lit, What If It's Us by Becky Albertalli and Adam Silvera, which was a sweet story but, sadly, had no librarian. Therefore, I had no choice but find another romance novel to read, one worthy of this blog. And a funny thing happened when I started to Google "romance novels featuring librarians". The autofill completed my search string with "navy seals" before I could type the word "librarian". I laughed wondering why the algorithm would make such a suggestion for me while also thinking that there really is a reading fetish for everyone (and far be it for me to question someone else's choices). But then a really strange thing happened when I finished my search the way I intended. The list of recommendations included a novel featuring both a librarian and a navy SEAL. It seemed the bibliosphere was trying to tell me something, so I downloaded the book and started reading. 

This is a quick read (a novella) which wastes no time getting to the sex. Librarian Erin recognizes that her affair with student/veteran Jack Powell is not sanctioned by the university. "She was in a leadership role at the college, bound by the same rules governing relationships as a professor or administrator." Nevertheless, after initially rejecting his offer of a drink, she throws caution to the wind and invites him to her place (ostensibly for coffee), and then to one of the group study rooms in the library where Jack actually "shushes" Erin and is sure to tell her that they're "gonna have to be quiet". As if she didn't know.

The sex in this one comes early and often, as such just about every possible word choice is used to describe body parts, and articles of clothing. This was unfortunate for me as I really don't find the words "slacks" or "panties" sexy at all, and each was used quite a few times. Final tally: Panties-9; Slacks-6. 

A little better editing would have been in order, especially since the audience was sure to include some anal-retentive librarians. It was unfortunate for me that I noticed the following inconsistency: prior to Jack and Erin's first sexual encounter, when they met by happenstance at the motorcycle dealer where Erin is about to put down a deposit, she is described as wearing a green turtleneck. However, somehow when they got back to her place and undress he's fumbling with the buttons on her blouse. So which is she wearing a turtleneck or a button-down blouse? So distracting.

The most off-putting thing for me though was the use of the word "pussies" to describe those who ride certain models of motorcycles that are not perceived to be as macho as other models. I frankly almost stopped reading when I got to that part. Anyone who is so uncomfortable in his own masculinity that he would resort to this kind of name calling will never find himself between the stacks with this librarian.

Monday, May 20, 2019

Everything I Never Told You - by Celeste Ng


Lydia Lee has a lot of pressure on her. Her mother (Marilyn) wants her to be a doctor (a dream she did not fulfill herself) and her Chinese-American father (James) wants her to be popular and to fit in (a dream he never realized). When their daughter's body is discovered at the bottom of  Middlewood Lake the Lees must come to grips with her death. The omniscient narrator gives the reader insight into each of the other members of the family and their histories, as well  as Jack, a classmate, and a person of interest in Lydia's disappearance. Readers eventually know for sure what happened. The Lees, however, are never convinced.

The story takes place during the late spring and summer of 1977. A time when Nath Lee, Lydia's older brother, is looking forward to starting Harvard. Harvard played an important role in the Lee family history; it is where Marilyn and James met in 1957 (in the history department which "had the peaceful quiet of a library"); and it was where James, notoriously, did not get hired once he earned his Ph.D.

Just before his sister's death Nath visited the Harvard campus where he
wandered awestruck, trying to take it all in: the fluted pillars of the enormous library, the red brick of the buildings against the bright green of the lawns, the sweet chalk smell that lingered in each lecture hall.
It is clear that James also remains in awe of Harvard. And that perhaps his son's acceptance is a vindication for him.

James' upbringing in Iowa, where he was the only person of Asian descent at the elite boarding school where his parents worked as a groundskeeper and kitchen worker made him long to be like everyone else. He surprised everyone at Lloyd Academy by passing the admission test, which allowed him to attend the school for free as the child of employees. He had no trouble answering the exam questions having learned so much from reading "all the books his father had bought, a nickel a bag, at library book sales."

Nath also took advantage of the library growing up. As a child he managed to get the librarian to allow him to borrow books from the adult section, and remained engrossed in learning about outer space, physics, and flight mechanics throughout his high school years.

And, finally, on a non-library note I feel compelled, as the wife of a geographer, to snark about this bit of undeserved Harvard fascination:

James' teaching assistant Louisa is less than impressed with some of the responses she found on student exams and tells him
I hope the summer students will be better... A few people insisted that that the Cape-to-Cairo Railroad was in Europe. For college students, they have surprising trouble with geography.
To which James responds:
Well, this isn't Harvard, that's for sure.
Except that it appears that where geography is concerned Middlewood College may indeed be able to hold a candle to our friends in Cambridge. Harvard, in fact, infamously got rid of its Geography department in 1948 when University President, and homophobe, James Conant declared geography "not an academic department".

This YouTube video give us some insight about the current state of geographic understanding at Harvard.

Wednesday, April 3, 2019

Dear Committee Members - by Julie Schumacher


Recommended to me by more than a few of my colleagues at the university, this satire was excellent listening fare for my husband and me during our regular weekend drives to our beach house. Told in epistolary style, this book is a series of letters written by English professor Jason T. Fitger of the fictitious Payne University (located somewhere in the Midwest). Fitger's letters are addressed not only to committee members, but to ex-wives, colleagues, friends, and administrators as well as to various people who are in positions to hire some of Fitger's acquaintances. These infamous Letters of Reference (aka LORs) were easily my favorite parts of the book. Fitger's outsized ego is revealed, as is his sarcasm, and any number of his myriad peccadilloes through his letters. Still, in the end we wish him no ill will. He is already dealing with plenty of BS that anyone in academics will readily recognize. I daresay that the descriptions of the shabby state of the offices in the Department of English hit too close to home when compared with the accommodations afforded to the Humanities at my own University.

Of course any academician worth their salt knows the value of a library. While we can never be sure that Our Dear Professor Fitger actually ever darkens the door of a library himself, he does seem to recognize them for their importance in exploring academic pursuits. For instance, in one LOR for student Gunner Lang (who is seeking work-study student employment anywhere on campus) Fitger's supplication that the young man be placed in the "library rather than the slops of food service" acknowledges that the library is a superior place and one that a student such as Gunner, who has "bona fide thoughts and knows how to apportion them into relatively grammatical sentences" certainly deserves to be. This LOR is written rather early in the book (which takes place over one academic year). A second LOR for young Gunner is written much later in the year in hopes of procuring the lad a summer research fellowship so as to write a literary criticism of O'Brien's In the Lake of the Woods. Fitger surmises that Gunner will put the $400 award to good use
by availing himself of the foul-smelling vending machine sandwiches in Appleton library while immersing himself in a study of narrative uncertainty and violence
This is not the first time, however, that Fitger mentions bad library vending machine food in an LOR. This honor goes to the letter written for his friend Troy Larpenteur, who rather inexplicably, is looking for a job as a sales associate at the Zentex Corporation. In his letter Fitger reminisces back twenty-three years
to the sight of Troy...at the Seminar table, his hair looking as if he had slept on the floor of the library by the vending machines (he usually had)... 
One other letter makes mention of the library: one written on behalf of Fitger's unfortunate colleague  Karolyi Pazmentalyi whose department (Slavic Languages) was a victim of the evil Provost's recent reorganization. Fitger describes his hapless friend's lonely work over the previous decade
holed up in a corner of the library his craggy profile visible in the the fluorescent glare of the overheads when everyone else was uncorking a beverage at home
which resulted in publication of a scholarly book, the type of work that would normally bring with it a promotion, but in Pazmentalyi's case was dismissed since his entire department was being purged. Again, I found that this passage hit a bit too close to home for me.

This book is truly a must-read for anyone in the Academy, although I expect that faculty will find it a lot funnier than those in administration will.