Reading and lying…

by Dr Davis on December 15, 2008

This has come up twice in the last twenty-four hours so I felt like I had to address it.

A smart student at the local high school and a friend of my son’s asked for quotes for her quiz, since she had not read the book. What’s up with that? There are even excellent videos of the book in question which would give her sufficient quotes to actually know the context of them.

(I get around this problem by giving the students the quotes and asking them who said it and to whom.)

bks-w-glassesThen Matthew Yglesias, a Harvard grad, wrote about lying about books he’s read.

Folks, that is not something you should admit in public. Lying. Why would anyone who reads your blog and doesn’t know you personally ever trust you again? Shoot, some of the folks that know you won’t trust you.

I am a PhD in English and I have not read every book out there in English-language literature. I don’t like some of the ones I’ve read.

But I don’t lie about my reading.

I read The Scarlet Letter once and didn’t like it.

I’ve read Frankenstein a lot and love it, but hate the feminist criticism about it, though sometimes I think they have a point.

I think I had to read 1984 for school, but I don’t remember it.

I had to read Animal Farm for school and enjoyed it. My son had to read it for me and loved it.

I’ve read several Hardy and several Faulkner books, none of which I liked. I hope never to have to read another. I do fancy one of Hardy’s poems, though I don’t like the subject matter. But it’s easy to understand and very interesting. I teach it to my freshmen lit students.

I haven’t read the book my high school friend didn’t read for her quiz. But if I ever have to teach it, I will read it before presenting it to the class.

reading-sceneryThere are many “classic” works which I have not read. There are other works which I think should be classics that most people have not read.

I do not read to show off my brain. I read to feed my brain and my soul. And so I try to avoid literature most of the time because it is thoroughly depressing.

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“Education in the Balance” and my response

by Dr Davis on December 15, 2008

Perhaps the most surprising finding is the relatively high percentage of the upper- division undergraduate courses taught by non- tenure- track faculty members across all three institutional types. English departments do sometimes hire journalists, artists, actors, technical writers, and members of the legal profession for upper-division undergraduate courses in literature, composition, film, and writing. But the numbers here suggest that there are not enough tenured or tenure- track faculty members to cover upper-division under-graduate courses. Or, perhaps, for tenured or tenure- track faculty members to maintain their involvement in the lower division, department chairs have had to turn to non- tenure- track faculty members to teach courses for majors—even a very small percentage of courses for graduate students. (8) 

 

So said MLA’s “Education in the Balance,” their 2007 report.

Obviously at my CCs there are no upper-division courses. The sophomore courses are 99% taught by the tenure-track instructors. The 1% is the May-term class which doesn’t count toward the 10.5 month contract and is taught by whatever willing adjunct can be found, which in this case was me.

At SLAC, I know the upper-division grammar class is taught by an adjunct, but I think that is the only course that is done that way. And they have enough faculty to teach it; no one wants to though. That teacher has a PhD and is a grammar specialist, though, so her work is not a sloughing off of a bad job to a poor adjunct.

MLA seemed to be surprised that full-time faculty in baccalaureate institutes taught just as many first-year courses as they taught upper-division classes. But there are a lot more first-year courses than upper-division classes and in most BA schools, there are still plenty of faculty teaching and not focusing on research.

These figures show that, of all the faculty members hired by departments, no more than one in seven was hired to a tenure-track position. (9)

This is not surprising at all. For every tenure-track position, most colleges have to hire two part-timers to cover the same amount of classes. But they can afford to hire six for the same amount of money. So they get the equivalent of three full-timers for less pay. Of course they are going to hire part-timers as long as the emphasis is on finances.

The committee is drawn, on the one hand, to the argument that the concept of a non- tenure-track faculty is an illegitimate exercise of institutional authority; it is, and it ought to be, contested by whatever means available. (15)

I do not understand why hiring non-tenure-track faculty is illegitimate. My SLAC has three-year renewable contracts. Those have been stable for decades, although they are changing now as the president moves the college towards more research-intense work. Even when the letting go of traditional faculty who have not been publishing happens, as I expect it will in a few years, most of these teachers know it is coming and can do something about it now.

Neither of my SLACs, including the one where I taught as ft, are mostly staffed by part-timers. 90% or more of their English departments are full-time. Obviously one has no tenure-track, but even so most of its faculty has been there for years, with the exception of two new hires last year who replaced people who left four years ago when the college was in a downturn. (They retired.) The other has one position in the department that is full-time, non-tenure track. It is staffed by an MFA who does not intend to get a PhD. This is exactly the position she wants.

At a time when the percentage of undergraduate courses taught by tenured or tenure-track faculty members is in decline, it seems imperative that we set standards for the appropriate levels and areas of participation by tenure-line and full-time non-tenure-track faculty members in the undergraduate curriculum. We understand that the first obligation of the tenured and tenure- track faculty is to majors and graduate students. (17)

This goes back to a discussion I started in Adjunct Crunching as a response to Erin O’Connor’s “Adjunct Crunch.

Erin is arguing in her post that freshman composition should be the main focus of teachers in the English departments. Obviously MLA disagrees with her.

What do I think? I think that most English departments are supported by their freshman composition classes and they should give support back to those classes. In a CC most of the tenure-track teachers are teaching two freshman and three sophomore classes every semester. Some teach three freshman and two sophomores. But that means that in a year they teach 7 or 8 freshman comp classes. An adjunct, who can now teach 7 classes a year, will teach all 7 as freshman comp. And at CC1 there are three adjuncts for every full-timer. At CC2 it is a 1 to 1 ratio. There are as many full-timers as there are part-timers. At SLAC, there is a ratio in favor of full-timers, but not by much. This means that at CC1 far more of the freshman classes are taught by adjuncts than are taught by full-timers.

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