Zooze the Horse roams around the pasture near Lamar State College. Zooze thinks about problems in academia. Zhe wants proffies to submit posts (blog posts, not fence posts).
Tuesday, January 31, 2017
BIG HUNGRY!
Have you signed the petition opposing the president's immigration-ban executive order?
A. No, because I disagree with it.
B. No, because I've been too busy trying to earn a living.
C. No, because I'm afraid the administrators at my school will notice and punish me.
D. No, because I'm afraid Trump will put me on his "Enemies List."
E. No, because I'm afraid my students might publicly criticize me for being liberal.
F. No, because I haven't been sober enough to sign anything during the last few days.
G. No, because _________________________.
H. Yes.
Monday, January 30, 2017
Trump's immigration ban triggers panic at universities
"Their whole dreams are shattered," said Dina Katabi, professor at MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab. "Imagine being in the middle of your new life you always dreamed of, you're doing your PhD -- everything looks well, and suddenly somebody closes the door."
Katabi, who was born in Syria, was hustling to finish a paper with her students Friday afternoon when news of the executive order broke. Suddenly, the work stopped. Shock, disbelief and concern filled the room. Some of her students were born in Iran. On the other side of the country, Sam Haghighi, president of the Iranian Students Association at Washington State University, began receiving a flurry of text messages from friends. "What are we going to do? How are we going to respond? What is going to happen?"
He stayed up until 4 a.m. Saturday, watching an online spreadsheet where Iranians were tracking whether they'd been able to enter the country. The later it got, the worse things looked.
More
Katabi, who was born in Syria, was hustling to finish a paper with her students Friday afternoon when news of the executive order broke. Suddenly, the work stopped. Shock, disbelief and concern filled the room. Some of her students were born in Iran. On the other side of the country, Sam Haghighi, president of the Iranian Students Association at Washington State University, began receiving a flurry of text messages from friends. "What are we going to do? How are we going to respond? What is going to happen?"
He stayed up until 4 a.m. Saturday, watching an online spreadsheet where Iranians were tracking whether they'd been able to enter the country. The later it got, the worse things looked.
More
Sunday, January 29, 2017
Contingent Cassandra forwards a petition
In case you are feeling the need to do something in the face of the news of the last 24 hours (or more), here's a link to a petition opposing the recent Executive Order limiting entry into the United States for nationals of seven majority-Muslim countries. The petition specifically highlights the likely effects on academic communities, while also pointing out the ways in which we are connected to other worldwide communities, both large and small:
Click link above or here to see (and, if you choose, sign) the whole thing.
--Cassandra
- This Executive Order is discriminatory. The EO unfairly targets a large group of immigrants and non-immigrants on the basis of their countries of origin, all of which are nations with a majority Muslim population. This is a major step towards implementing the stringent racial and religious profiling promised on the campaign trail. The United States is a democratic nation, and ethnic and religious profiling are in stark contrast to the values and principles we hold.
- This Executive Order is detrimental to the national interests of the United States. The EO significantly damages American leadership in higher education and research. US research institutes host a significant number of researchers from the nations subjected to the upcoming restrictions. From Iran alone, more than 3000 students have received PhDs from American universities in the past 3 years. The proposed EO limits collaborations with researchers from these nations by restricting entry of these researchers to the US and can potentially lead to departure of many talented individuals who are current and future researchers and entrepreneurs in the US. We strongly believe the immediate and long term consequences of this EO do not serve our national interests.
- This Executive Order imposes undue burden on members of our community: The people whose status in the United States would be reconsidered under this EO are our students, friends, colleagues, and members of our communities. The implementation of this EO will necessarily tear families apart by restricting entry for family members who live outside of the US and limiting the ability to travel for those who reside and work in the US. These restrictions would be applied to nearly all individuals from these countries, regardless of their immigration status or any other circumstances. This measure is fatally disruptive to the lives of these immigrants, their families, and the communities of which they form an integral part. It is inhumane, ineffective, and un-American.
Click link above or here to see (and, if you choose, sign) the whole thing.
--Cassandra
Friday, January 27, 2017
Casual Update from Orange, TX
- Thanks to Fab, Cal, Bubba, and Cassandra for whatever they've done behind the scenes to make this blog a going concern. If you want to contact them about me or the blog or about horses in general, I presume you know how to email them at whatever email addresses they may have given you in the past.
- Thanks to everybody who has posted or commented or emailed me. There is a horse near the Sabine River that loves you.
- One of the emails received this past week at Zooze.the.horse@gmail.com said, "What is the email box at the lower right part of the blog for? I guess I am not one of the brighter proffies out there. Is that something I'm supposed to use to send you notes like this?" And the answer is: I don't know. Bubba or Fab will probably know. Good question.
- The blog continues, indefinitely, to be moderated and constipated. Just submit stuff. This is not confusing like the PNAS. If you want something posted, but without being attributed to you or your avatar, then I'll continue to do that--if your intentions are clear, as they have been so far.
- I will continue to occasionally split infinitives and steadfastly value the pseudonymity, anonymity, privacy, and dignity of people participating here. And I like this quote published by POTUS on January 17: "Privacy is more than just, as Justice Brandeis famously proclaimed, the 'right to be let alone.' It is the right to have our most personal information be kept safe by others we trust. It is the right to communicate freely and to do so without fear. It is the right to associate freely with others, regardless of the medium. In an age where so many of our thoughts, words, and movements are digitally recorded, privacy cannot simply be an abstract concept in our lives; privacy must be an embedded value."
- The "Rules of the Pasture" have been moved over to the right side.
- Thanks to the people who have emailed to offer corrections to the info on the right side.
- And, finally, here's a link to an op-ed written by one of the better former university presidents in the U.S. I used to work for him. Bubba did, too. Make of that what you will.
Your Real Gosh-darned Moderator,
Zooze (the Horse)
Thursday, January 26, 2017
Maybe not fake news, but definitely old news
So (according to a headline in IHE I noticed while reading about student antics in Oklahoma), the American College on Education has released a report entitled Unpacking Relationships: Instruction and Student Outcomes. I can't seem to find an actual copy of the report (even in the "store" section of the ACE site), so I have no idea what methodology was used, but, according to the press release on which the IHE article appears to be closely based, findings include these gems:
The paper concludes that for students to succeed, they must be engaged in stimulating and effective learning environments. But for that to happen, “faculty need to help students make connections between various learning experiences and the end goals of higher education by supporting student-centered learning environments,” the paper notes.
“Instruction matters,” the paper states. “And higher education needs to provide support for faculty to help students attain outcomes.”
However, the evidence-based instructional practices that have been widely documented as effective in promoting better student outcomes are not widely used, the paper also concludes. It explores five areas of intersection between instruction and student outcomes:My first reaction to most of this is "duh." My reaction to the sentence in red is, well, to see red. I can't speak for other disciplines (though many of you can, and I suspect you'll say you're doing these things, or doing your best given class size and other conditions), but I do this stuff. My colleagues do this stuff. This is very, very old news in composition world (so much so that we've got a decades-old set of basic writing-intensive course expectations and a nearly decade-old faculty evaluation rubric that ensure that we're doing most of them).
- Transparency: Students must have a clear understanding of where they are going as well as the criteria that will be used to assess that they have gotten there.
- Pedagogical Approaches: Pedagogical approaches, such as high-impact practices and personalized instruction, are linked to enhancing student learning, involvement and engagement beyond simply making the coherence of the educational experience clear to students.
- Assessment: Students need multiple opportunities to practice learning in a variety of situations to facilitate the transfer of knowledge.
- Self-regulation: The active participation of students in their own learning is a necessary component of the relationship between instruction and student outcomes.
“This paper shows the vital role effective instruction plays in student success, what type of practices can have a positive impact and the importance of building institutional capacity to support faculty,” said ACE President Molly Corbett Broad. “It documents a path forward that can lead to higher postsecondary graduation rates and help students and institutions meet their academic goals.”
- Alignment: The alignment of elements such as content, instructional design, pedagogical approaches, assignments and evaluative criteria is critical to successful learning environments.
Wednesday, January 25, 2017
BIG HUNGRY!
Q. How do you generally feel about your students?
A. I love most of them.
B. I tolerate them because I need a paycheck.
C. I want to build a huge, beautiful wall between me and the students.
D. I am puzzled by them.
E. I get depressed thinking that they are the future.
F. I spend as much time as possible with them outside of class (e.g., on my porch, at bars).
G. I've only married two of them so far.
H. Other:__________________________
Tuesday, January 24, 2017
O.K. This wasn't the only blackface moment in Stillwater last week.
Over the weekend, a female student [at Oklahoma State] posted a photo of herself in blackface on Snapchat with the caption “When he says he only likes black girls.”
She apologized in several posts on her Facebook page early Monday morning. “I am deeply sorry for those that I have offended,” the student wrote. “My intentions were not at all to be racist. For anyone who knows me, you know I am not racist."
MORE.
She apologized in several posts on her Facebook page early Monday morning. “I am deeply sorry for those that I have offended,” the student wrote. “My intentions were not at all to be racist. For anyone who knows me, you know I am not racist."
MORE.
Monday, January 23, 2017
Froderick Frankenstien from Fresno ponders the great questions
My high-school physics teacher was an affable, inconsequential, old bit of fluff. We kids loved him, because we spent lots of time having insult contests, keeping records of the colors of his socks, being moralized to by him, and otherwise goofing off. He was also absent a whole lot: we kids had lots of fun slipping off campus when he was gone.
He divided the physics class up into the "scientific track" and the "non-scientific track." The scientific
track included the handful of kids who would actually use physics in later life, including me. The "non-scientific track" included the other >75% of the class. He clearly put much more time into the non-scientific track: he gave us well-prepared, organized lectures on physics (specifically, kinematics) only twice during the entire school year. We did not cover electricity at all. This put me at a serious disadvantage the next year, when I was taking introductory, calculus-based university physics.
One of the more useful things we did all year was involving all the kids in a debate about whether there should be a ten-year moratorium on the construction of new civilian nuclear plants. It's funny to realize it, too, but in real life, he got over five times longer than he asked for: the first new civilian nuclear power plants in the U.S. ordered since the Three Mile Island accident are under construction now.
And yet, at my 40th reunion, he was remembered very fondly. One of my friends (who despite having been on the scientific track with me has had a prosperous career as a lawyer) even had a copy of the long poem that mentions everyone in the class one-by-one, which he wrote at the end of the year. My friend said of it, "Look at the time he must have spent!" I had to bite my tongue not to blurt out, "I sure wish he'd spent that time teaching us physics!" Aside from this and the nuclear-power debate, the main thing anyone else remembered was the goofing off.
And yet, I was the only kid in the class to go on to major in physics in college. I was one of two in the history of the school to have gotten a Ph.D. in the subject. After all, most of his students benefited more than if he'd taught us all physics, any of which only two of us would ever have remembered.
So, the question is: Was he right, to have served his students in this manner?
While contemplating that, here's another, similar conundrum:
Yerkes Observatory became operational in 1897. When it was built, its 40-inch refracting telescope was the largest telescope in the world. The 40-inch is still the largest refracting telescope in the world: all subsequent largr telescopes have been reflecting telescopes. It was also the last time the largest telescope in the world was built on an essentially sea-level site, since all the subsequent largest telescopes in the world were built on mountaintops.
When opened, Yerkes was without question a state-of-the-art facility. Edwin Frost became director in 1905, and retired in 1932. During this time, he essentially turned the observatory into a country club, with lots of social activities for the staff and their families, but falling away from the forefront of science. Only when Otto Struve became director in 1932 did he turn it back into the scientific powerhouse it was intended to be.
Struve was one of the great builders in the history of astronomy. He founded McDonald Observatory in Texas, building the second-largest telescope in the world in 1939. He founded the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in 1956. He then built up the astronomy department at UC Berkeley into the top place it still is today.
When Frost died, he was well-loved, surrounded by family and friends. When Struve died, he did so alone in a hospital room in Berkeley. While people do refer to Struve as "a great man," I don't think I've ever heard anyone call him a friend.
So, here's another question: Who led the better life: Edwin Frost or Otto Struve?
--Froderick Frankenstien from Fresno
He divided the physics class up into the "scientific track" and the "non-scientific track." The scientific
track included the handful of kids who would actually use physics in later life, including me. The "non-scientific track" included the other >75% of the class. He clearly put much more time into the non-scientific track: he gave us well-prepared, organized lectures on physics (specifically, kinematics) only twice during the entire school year. We did not cover electricity at all. This put me at a serious disadvantage the next year, when I was taking introductory, calculus-based university physics.
One of the more useful things we did all year was involving all the kids in a debate about whether there should be a ten-year moratorium on the construction of new civilian nuclear plants. It's funny to realize it, too, but in real life, he got over five times longer than he asked for: the first new civilian nuclear power plants in the U.S. ordered since the Three Mile Island accident are under construction now.
And yet, at my 40th reunion, he was remembered very fondly. One of my friends (who despite having been on the scientific track with me has had a prosperous career as a lawyer) even had a copy of the long poem that mentions everyone in the class one-by-one, which he wrote at the end of the year. My friend said of it, "Look at the time he must have spent!" I had to bite my tongue not to blurt out, "I sure wish he'd spent that time teaching us physics!" Aside from this and the nuclear-power debate, the main thing anyone else remembered was the goofing off.
And yet, I was the only kid in the class to go on to major in physics in college. I was one of two in the history of the school to have gotten a Ph.D. in the subject. After all, most of his students benefited more than if he'd taught us all physics, any of which only two of us would ever have remembered.
So, the question is: Was he right, to have served his students in this manner?
While contemplating that, here's another, similar conundrum:
Yerkes Observatory became operational in 1897. When it was built, its 40-inch refracting telescope was the largest telescope in the world. The 40-inch is still the largest refracting telescope in the world: all subsequent largr telescopes have been reflecting telescopes. It was also the last time the largest telescope in the world was built on an essentially sea-level site, since all the subsequent largest telescopes in the world were built on mountaintops.
When opened, Yerkes was without question a state-of-the-art facility. Edwin Frost became director in 1905, and retired in 1932. During this time, he essentially turned the observatory into a country club, with lots of social activities for the staff and their families, but falling away from the forefront of science. Only when Otto Struve became director in 1932 did he turn it back into the scientific powerhouse it was intended to be.
Struve was one of the great builders in the history of astronomy. He founded McDonald Observatory in Texas, building the second-largest telescope in the world in 1939. He founded the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in 1956. He then built up the astronomy department at UC Berkeley into the top place it still is today.
When Frost died, he was well-loved, surrounded by family and friends. When Struve died, he did so alone in a hospital room in Berkeley. While people do refer to Struve as "a great man," I don't think I've ever heard anyone call him a friend.
So, here's another question: Who led the better life: Edwin Frost or Otto Struve?
--Froderick Frankenstien from Fresno
CMU professors study selfies.
You probably then posted the selfie on Facebook, Twitter or maybe Snapchat.
But why did you take a picture of yourself?
Three professors in the School of Broadcast and Cinematic Arts at Central Michigan University recently studied selfie-taking.
They found people take selfies for two main reasons: information storage and entertainment.
More.
More.
Saturday, January 21, 2017
Nine colleges that cost nothing
With college costs soaring and $1.3 trillion in student loans outstanding, a handful of colleges have carved out a unique spot in academia. For starters, the costs of attendance are $0.
Getting in is no small feat.
Each school is geared to determined young scholars eager to challenge themselves throughout their college career. In return for a degree at no cost – and with no debt burden - the commitment they require, even after graduation, is steep. . . .
Each school is geared to determined young scholars eager to challenge themselves throughout their college career. In return for a degree at no cost – and with no debt burden - the commitment they require, even after graduation, is steep. . . .
Spoiler:
- Berea College
- College of the Ozarks
- Deep Springs College
- U.S. Air Force Academy
- U.S. Coast Guard Academy
- U.S. Merchant Marine Academy
- U.S. Military Academy – West Point
- U.S. Naval Academy
- Webb Institute
Friday, January 20, 2017
Beaker Ben is toying with an idea
I am toying with the idea of looking for another job. I started perusing the job ads and websites. Here are my...
Top Ten Complaints about Faculty Job Ads
10. Spellcheck the damn ad, would you?Yours truly,
9. A few departments advertised in print but not online. Enjoy reviewing your eight applications (including mine) because nobody reads the print ads anymore.
8. Stop bragging about your school in the ad. Most applicants are desperate for a job so they really don’t care.
7. I see that you are reusing the job ad from last year. Fine, just change the application due date next time.
6. You want five references? FIVE? If I knew five people that liked me at my current school, I probably wouldn’t need to look for a new job.*
5. Hey, I know the guy in charge of this search committee! Never mind.
4. A diversity statement? Fine. I am fully supportive of hiring faculty from groups traditionally underrepresented in science, starting right after you hire me.
3. It’s not a good sign when the web link to the school’s HR department in the ad doesn’t work.
2. “May we contact your current employer?” Hmm, that depends. What are you going to ask them?
1. Why do the big-name schools waste their money on these long job ads? Just say, “We’re Princeton and we want somebody in this field. Go!”
Beaker Ben
* This isn’t a big problem because my college’s webmaster is a friend of mine. We can set up a few fake school webpages for administrators who don’t exist but really, that’s such an unnecessary hassle.
Thursday, January 19, 2017
Prof Poopiehead wonders, "Why was this college president fired for letting a homeless student sleep in the library?"
What the hell. Vatterott College is a for-profit institution, so I guess we shouldn't be surprised with their conduct. As the fired college president himself says during the radio interview, the college cared more about their "corporate assets" than the well-being of the student.
Read Here.
- Prof Poopiehead
Read Here.
- Prof Poopiehead
Big Thirsty: My Revamped College Essay.
Oh, I don't remember what I wrote. I know the college essay was not something I received any advice about, and as I only applied at a few schools, it just is a blip in my memory. I know I wanted it to seem as if I needed college, that I wanted college. But who knows what was in it?
But if I could try again, if I could back and set my sights higher than the local state colleges where the pretty girls from my high school were going - who I never saw again! - I'd start like this:
Dear College Leaders:
You don't know me. But I'm a regular high school student. I smell like pot and listen to a lot of Metallica. I read comic books. I eat bad food and don't brush my teeth. I would like to do more of all of that, but about 250 miles away from my parent's house. What do you say?
Your pal,
Fab
Q: What Would Your Adult Self Write in a College Essay Now?
But if I could try again, if I could back and set my sights higher than the local state colleges where the pretty girls from my high school were going - who I never saw again! - I'd start like this:
Dear College Leaders:
You don't know me. But I'm a regular high school student. I smell like pot and listen to a lot of Metallica. I read comic books. I eat bad food and don't brush my teeth. I would like to do more of all of that, but about 250 miles away from my parent's house. What do you say?
Your pal,
Fab
Q: What Would Your Adult Self Write in a College Essay Now?
Wednesday, January 18, 2017
Transplanted Anne contemplates "Post-Election College Paper Grading Rubric"
Have you seen this rubric?
Here's a taste:
I am considering using it for my assigned end-of-semester paper. I think more students might pass the class than if I use the standard rubric.
After the recent serious post, a little humor seemed like it might make a good addition to Zooze.
--Transplanted Anne
Watch Out!
Turning Point USA (TPUSA) is a non-profit organization founded in 2012 by Charlie Kirk, a conservative youth at just 18 years old. TPUSA is well funded by donors; in 2014, it raised $1 million to create an organization that caters to young, conservative students. One of its subsidiary projects is Professor Watchlist, which gained over 500,000 views in its first month. Its mission is to gather information in order to “expose and document college professors who discriminate against conservative students and advance leftist propaganda in the classroom.” However, contrary to its mission to protect students in the classroom, numerous professors made the list for just one or two published articles outside the classroom.
More.
More.
Tuesday, January 17, 2017
"My First Class of the New Year," by Middle-Aged and Morose
My first class of the new year is about to start and I am more nervous than I have been in ages. It’s not even a pleasant excited nervous. It feels more like the creeping feeling of doom I felt when I was twelve and the class bully had said he was going to jump me after school. It’s not the class material that’s prompting this. I am about to go teach the survey class I first taught in 1985. I can teach this blindfolded. No, it’s the political tone now that scares me. I had an unsettling conversation with an administrator last week. Even on our little campus, one of the most diverse in the area, hate incidents suddenly hit new all-times highs last fall, aimed at Muslim, black, and Latin students. Mostly graffiti, nasty notes, and insults screamed across a room, there was an actual death threat from a Trump-supporting white student against a Trump-opponent during class. Our Security (excuse me, Campus Safety) is on alert and professors are holding their breath as Inauguration Day approaches. Since we’re in the greater DC area, a lot of students will be attending either the inauguration or one of the protests. Feelings will be aroused all around. As a result, for the first time ever I am recording my lectures, and I have begun recording meetings with students in my office (my state is a “one party consent" state).
This is ridiculous and it is appalling that we’ve come to this. I love my job and am pissed off beyond belief that I am dreading walking into a classroom. I have very strong political beliefs, but in my past career as a government employee we were encouraged to be non-partisan and I took that to heart. Besides, when I was a student I didn’t like it when professors brought their politics too heavily to class, even if I agreed with them. I felt it stifled classroom debate. So I don’t make political comments in class and do not even have political stickers on my car. I am wearing a small safety pin now. Screw those that say it’s “virtue signaling.” Two of my students thanked me quietly for it last semester. If it tells some of my students that they can safely come to me for help, then I’ll do it. (And yes, I’ve spoken to some students I know from vulnerable groups to tell them I am here to help if they feel threatened. ) Oh, and before somebody starts to talk about how conservative students can feel threatened on a college campus, I teach at a somewhat conservative school. McCain and Romney both carried the student vote on our campus the previous two elections. This time it was Secretary Clinton. So while there is anger on both sides, the hate seems to be flowing mostly one way. That makes for a dangerous situation. I don’t believe in campus as a huge “safe space.” College is a spot where you are supposed to argue, debate, and hear multiple perspectives. But yelling “Trump’s going to send you home!” to a Hispanic student or “Sand-nigger” at a Muslim are not debate. They’re abuse. And that is NOT what campus is for, but that, I fear, is where we are at. It makes me angry. It makes me sick. It makes me worry about my students’ futures, for those at the receiving end of the abuse, and for those that are doing the screaming as both are learning exactly the wrong lessons.
So, off I go to class. Wish me luck.
Middle-Aged and Morose
Monday, January 16, 2017
From WashPo.
"... campus administrators have morphed into civility police. On some campuses, 'bias response teams' investigate professors’ online comments. Several universities, including Yale, may soon introduce a smartphone app that lets users anonymously report offensive remarks. These anonymous reports will allow university bureaucrats — and perhaps even the public — to compile a directory of 'subversive' professors in the spirit of dictatorial regimes. One can easily imagine dueling 'watchlists' compiled by liberal and conservative activists with the shared aim of chilling unwanted speech."
Read the full Zooze NEWWZ before it goes to the glue factory.
Read the full Zooze NEWWZ before it goes to the glue factory.
Sunday, January 15, 2017
Letting it sink in
This little blog popped onto the scene less than 48 hours ago, on a Friday at the beginning of what is a long holiday weekend for many people. Whether you are celebrating Martin Luther King Day, Prohibition Remembrance Day, Religious Freedom Day, or some other day, may it be meaningful for you. The blog stats speak for themselves. We are getting our bearings. Peace.
Friday, January 13, 2017
Frankie Bow says . . .
I love this and I hope Zooze agrees.
This mannequin just threw a textbook in the garbage and told me to call it by its first name pic.twitter.com/VLdvMBY17g— Emmett Morrison (@EmmettMorrison) October 19, 2016
First Post
The horse, Zooze, runs the show here. I am merely introducing hir. When it comes to this blog, I do whatever zhe tells me to do. Zhe said, "Move the compound to Orange, Texas." The horse is the boss.
There are not yet Rules of Misery in Orange. Zooze mostly just wanders around Orange grazing on hay and contemplating hamster fur and higher education issues. A duck sometimes waddles across the pasture. And alpaca sightings have occurred.
For the foreseeable future, Zooze is both moderated and constipated--kind of like Cal was at RYS. Maybe that's good because it allows everybody to be more deliberate.
So email hir your post or your kind, thoughtful whatever.
One last thought: I question Zooze's sanity because successfully starting up a blog requires all kinds of hard work and lots of luck. It would be a cold day in hell before I'd ever moderate a blog like this. I have experience IRL founding and running a site with thousands of unique monthly visitors. Not millions like Gawker or Trump, but still. It drives a person to guzzle bourbon. So I think zhe's nuts for attempting this, but that horse is more optimistic and kindhearted than I am. I recommend hir without reservation.
P.s. If you are seeing this, it's because Fab Sun has a good heart.