Administrating Greed

While faculty, students, and staff  has been struggling through a recession and its lingering aftermath, the administrators have quietly been lining their pockets.  If the American Council of Trustees and Alumni folks are complaining,  the privileged pot calling the kettle black, then you know the greed is getting embarrassing.  The ACTA cites statistics from a survey of administrators.

43 percent of respondents “said that they were the first such employees to hold the title at their institutions.” – 51 percent of respondents “reported having annual budgets that exceed $300,000.” – More than 2/3 of respondents reported that their annual income was at least $100,000 while 14 percent reported an income in excess of $200,000.

Deregulated markets have created the same distortion in healthcare.  It’s not unrelated to the more traditional forms of corruption that’s become routine in big sports programs.  The administrators can only line their pockets– and bribe young athletes–because their control of institutions is so unchecked. The lack of unions is just as important as the lack of regulatory oversight.

Property is Theft: Here’s Your Grade!

I’ve long been fascinated with plagiarism, not so much as a problem of students, but as a preoccupation of certain professors.  A fear of plagiarism– and an anxiety about grade  inflation–seems to be symptomatic of our era, to use the old term from theory. Yet, as Rob Jenkins suggests, there’s really not much to worry about when it comes to plagiarism (“Toward a Rational Response to Plagiarism.”)

Urban myth at the University of Texas at Austin held that the fraternities had extensive collections of tests and papers, dating back decades, that the fraternity brothers could use for all sorts of mischief.  I am not sure how much of that story is reality and how much is braggadocio, but I do know that a certain subset of fraternity culture sees substantive learning as irrelevant to a college degree.

Animal House (and its antecedents and predecessors) may be an exaggeration, but it’s rooted in a grain of truth. There’s nothing new in the idea of cheating in college and little evidence that technology– the internet or otherwise–has made it any more common. Most writing teachers don’t need any software, either, to notice that a particular students’ prose has suddenly improved dramatically.

It takes  time and energy to succeed at cheating. Students don’t cheat often, and they cheat under pressure, and do it badly. The anxiety about plagiarism, I think, echos the degradation of the authority of the college professor, culturally and economically. As our ‘soft power‘ declines, in short, professors feel the need to assert their authority as the guardians of property and bourgeois propriety.

Zombies Walk the Earth

I read a piece this morning about the U.S. public education system (“How to Do the Right Thing in a System That is Wrong?”) that compares teachers’ positions in today’s system to the citizens under the regimes of the former Soviet Union.  Setting aside the hyperbole (so far, we don’t have an educational secret police) the author’s rallying call makes a lot of sense: “Do the right thing, America. Protest. Stand up and stand against your state’s annual orgy of standardized testing.”

What’s so striking about this piece is its timidity and its apparent ignorance of history.  The writer, Marion Brady, seems to assume that the defeat of organized resistance is complete, and that “citizen groups… petitions… speeches… books, articles, op-eds, and letters to editors” are the only legitimate forms of collective resistance. That’s not true. The first line of resistance for teachers has to be their unions. Those communist regimes weren’t defeated by letters to the editor.

It’s important to remember that the successful fight against the Soviet System began with the solidarity movement in Poland. It’s not workers protesting alone, although the risk to individuals was great, it’s large numbers of workers working together towards a common goal.  At one time,  here in the U.S., we understood the power of collective struggle and work; it’s how we built the modern world. We have to fight the amnesia that tries to fool us into a self-defeating individualism.