Monday, September 6, 2010 - 4:07 PM
Among the most popular New York Times articles of the past 24 hours (not to mention my Twitter feed) is this Christopher Shea essay about tenure. Shea reviews two recent books by university professors who are so bold as to suggest abolishing the institution.
After reading the essay, however, I must conclude that the reason it's so popular is that the only people who read the New York Times on Labor Day weekend are academics and their relatives.
Here's the part where Shea lost me -- the opening paragraphs:
In tough economic times, it’s easy to gin up anger against elites. The bashing of bankers is already so robust that the economist William Easterly has compared it, with perhaps a touch of hyperbole, to genocidal racism. But in recent months, a more unlikely privileged group has found itself in the cross hairs: tenured professors.
At a time when nearly one in 10 American workers is unemployed, here’s a crew (the complaint goes) who are guaranteed jobs for life, teach only a few hours a week, routinely get entire years off, dump grading duties onto graduate students and produce “research” on subjects like “Rednecks, Queers and Country Music” or “The Whatness of Books.” Or maybe they stop doing research altogether (who’s going to stop them?), dropping their workweek to a manageable dozen hours or so, all while making $100,000 or more a year. Ready to grab that pitchfork yet?
That sketch — relayed on numerous blogs and op-ed pages — is exaggerated, but no one who has observed the academic world could call it entirely false. And it’s a vision that has caught on with an American public worried about how to foot the bill for it all (emphasis added)
OK, here's my question: where is the evidence for this public ire? Compared to bankers, politicians, or American Muslims, where exactly is the outpouring of outrage against tenured radicals?
I'll tell you where the evidence ain't -- Shea's essay. His review of the two books is perfectly adequate, but there is zero evidence beyond that stray reference to "numerous blogs and op-ed pages." One of those op-eds, of course, was by one of the book authors he reviews, however, so I don't think it could count.
As a tenured professor who's recent scholarly output could be accused of trending towards the whimsical, I should be a Big Target for this kind of attack. I ain't seeing it, however. Maybe this is because I'm ridiculously out of touch, but compared with the other groups listed above, academics have not faced much public scorn.
Indeed, if anything, the past few years should have been an "easy test" for hostility towards tenure, as hard times should have triggered a massive outpouring of support for this kind of higher education reform. Again, however, I see no evidence for such a groundswell.
I'm going to file this under Jack Shafer's "Bogus Trends" watch and enjoy the rest of my Labor Day. I suggest you do the same.
Well, if you ignore the opening paragraphs and the closing paragraph, the essay isn't too bad. He starts off pointing fingers and is a bit whiny as he wades through the reality of a Bachelor's degree being the new minimum education. I agree with him that you won't find much of a deal if you just stick to that and I encourage everyone to seek even higher education, in the forms of Master's and PhD's in where they believe they can benefit (most likely in the financial sense). There's always a deal to be found and always a great way to waste money and college education is no exception.
I am not sure whether I've misread your blog post or you are the one who either misread Chris Shea's essay or focused on a very narrow point of it. the way i read it, the essay goes beyond the one idea of professors becoming the Big Target.
Although a senzitive issue for an academic to blog about, "the unintended effects of tenure, which [he believes] blocks the way to fresh ideas" might have been a more interesting (and incendiary!) topic to focus on; i am sure that there are many divided opinions out there, both among academics and students.
I would say there is a groundswell against tuition, it's clearly a bubble just wating to be pricked, but I don't know that the public has transferred that discontent to more specific ire against professors and the tenure system.
Zombies lumber into curriculum at University of Baltimore
New class examines monsters' ever-expanding grip on pop culture
By Childs Walker, The Baltimore Sun, Sep 06, 2010
"Zombies are everywhere these days. They have inspired math professors to devise statistical models for surviving a 'zombie apocalypse.' And now, they're the subject of a new course, otherwise known as English 333, at the University of Baltimore. Zombies have shown great resilience as a storytelling device and in this era of gloom and dread, their popularity is cresting. Maybe they would be a perfect hook to get students talking about sociology, literature and a bevy of other disciplines that can sound stuffy."
I notice some disgust toward tenured professors in public colleges that are facing drastic cuts, but in general, teachers (professors included) simply do not get paid enough for the level of knowledge. It is entirely possible that all smart people will work in finance in the future.
Daniel W. Drezner is professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University.
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