"A recent Urban Institute study found that from 2011 to 2015, one in five students attending a two-year college lived in a food-insecure household. A study from the Wisconsin Hope Lab found that in 2016, 14 percent of community college students had been homeless at some point. At LaGuardia Community College in New York, where I am president, 77 percent of students live in households making less than $25,000 per year."
--Gail O. Mellow, President of LaGuardia Community College
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/28/opinion/community-college-misconception.html
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).
Monday, August 28, 2017
Friday, August 25, 2017
Hurricane Harvey
Lots of rain in Orange for the next week.
"Due to concerns over the impact of Hurricane Harvey, Lamar State College – Orange is canceling classes scheduled for Monday, August 28, and Tuesday, August 29. We will closely monitor the weather situation to determine if it will be safe to resume classes on Wednesday, August 30."
Be safe.
"Due to concerns over the impact of Hurricane Harvey, Lamar State College – Orange is canceling classes scheduled for Monday, August 28, and Tuesday, August 29. We will closely monitor the weather situation to determine if it will be safe to resume classes on Wednesday, August 30."
Be safe.
Wednesday, August 23, 2017
small thirsty, from TubaPlayingProf
A question for the chemistry folk.
Our favorite niece—don't tell her siblings and cousins—is amazing as she works from both sides of her brain. She finds biology and philosophy equally interesting and challenging, and she can hear a song for the first time in the morning, and after some practice, play it on one of the three instruments she's comfortable with. If you see her on her phone or tablet, she's most likely reading a novel—I can't forgive her for calling Pride and Prejudice “kinda cute,” however. And she's the warm, witty one, the one everyone loves to be with.
About college, she announced her decision to attend the local university with “in STEM, where you go to college for undergrad isn't as important for most people.” She was 17 at the time, and she was convinced about being right as 17-year-olds often are. Her cousins tried to convince her to attend Flagship U, but she argued, “I can watch sports here at home.” A friend tried to convince her to accept an offer from several well-known colleges, but she argued, “No debt for this girl.” The local university had come through with a full ride.
A junior at 19 she has decided she loves chemistry because it is interesting and challenging. In other words, she has to work at getting it and the good grades that come with getting chemistry. Recognizing that drive, the faculty have asked her to tutor her classmates. And poor fool, she loves helping them. And she is apparently excellent at it.
On a recent trip home, my partner and I had a quiet moment with her—hard to do with large families at times. She wanted to talk with the two college professors in the family: “I'm thinking that being a chemistry teacher at a university would be right for me.” She then quickly added, “I mean, I might be right for that.” Then finally, the question: “are there jobs for people who want to teach chemistry at a university? Just be a teacher?”
And here's my question for my friends here at Zooze the horse: are there? I can't go by my field, heavens! And my STEM colleagues here reluctantly teach to be able to do their research; I know from general consent that they are pressured to produce results for tenure and promotion and win huge grants.
Is getting a PhD in chemistry “just to be a teacher” something she wants to do? Can do? Stipends? Assistantships? Any way she can avoid debt? Can one even say that s/he just wants to be a teacher and get a job?
Will the necessary research to earn a degree fire a passion for research?
Warnings? Insights? Anything you can share to help a caring uncle and aunt give a favorite niece good advice?
—TubaPlayingProf
Our favorite niece—don't tell her siblings and cousins—is amazing as she works from both sides of her brain. She finds biology and philosophy equally interesting and challenging, and she can hear a song for the first time in the morning, and after some practice, play it on one of the three instruments she's comfortable with. If you see her on her phone or tablet, she's most likely reading a novel—I can't forgive her for calling Pride and Prejudice “kinda cute,” however. And she's the warm, witty one, the one everyone loves to be with.
About college, she announced her decision to attend the local university with “in STEM, where you go to college for undergrad isn't as important for most people.” She was 17 at the time, and she was convinced about being right as 17-year-olds often are. Her cousins tried to convince her to attend Flagship U, but she argued, “I can watch sports here at home.” A friend tried to convince her to accept an offer from several well-known colleges, but she argued, “No debt for this girl.” The local university had come through with a full ride.
A junior at 19 she has decided she loves chemistry because it is interesting and challenging. In other words, she has to work at getting it and the good grades that come with getting chemistry. Recognizing that drive, the faculty have asked her to tutor her classmates. And poor fool, she loves helping them. And she is apparently excellent at it.
On a recent trip home, my partner and I had a quiet moment with her—hard to do with large families at times. She wanted to talk with the two college professors in the family: “I'm thinking that being a chemistry teacher at a university would be right for me.” She then quickly added, “I mean, I might be right for that.” Then finally, the question: “are there jobs for people who want to teach chemistry at a university? Just be a teacher?”
And here's my question for my friends here at Zooze the horse: are there? I can't go by my field, heavens! And my STEM colleagues here reluctantly teach to be able to do their research; I know from general consent that they are pressured to produce results for tenure and promotion and win huge grants.
Is getting a PhD in chemistry “just to be a teacher” something she wants to do? Can do? Stipends? Assistantships? Any way she can avoid debt? Can one even say that s/he just wants to be a teacher and get a job?
Will the necessary research to earn a degree fire a passion for research?
Warnings? Insights? Anything you can share to help a caring uncle and aunt give a favorite niece good advice?
—TubaPlayingProf
Sunday, August 20, 2017
Cambridge University Press complies with censorship
The flava:
China’s crackdown on academic freedom has reached the world’s oldest publishing house.
Cambridge University Press (CUP) said it has pulled over 300 articles and book reviews on its China site from the China Quarterly (CQ), one of the most prestigious journals in the China studies field, at the request of the government’s General Administration of Press and Publication (GAPP). The news came to light after an undated screenshot of an email to CQ’s editorial board from the journal’s editor, Tim Pringle, went viral on social media today (Aug. 18).
The rest:
https://qz.com/1056938/cambridge-university-press-china-quarterly-complies-with-censorship-removes-300-articles-on-topics-like-tiananmen-and-tibet-in-china/
China’s crackdown on academic freedom has reached the world’s oldest publishing house.
Cambridge University Press (CUP) said it has pulled over 300 articles and book reviews on its China site from the China Quarterly (CQ), one of the most prestigious journals in the China studies field, at the request of the government’s General Administration of Press and Publication (GAPP). The news came to light after an undated screenshot of an email to CQ’s editorial board from the journal’s editor, Tim Pringle, went viral on social media today (Aug. 18).
The rest:
https://qz.com/1056938/cambridge-university-press-china-quarterly-complies-with-censorship-removes-300-articles-on-topics-like-tiananmen-and-tibet-in-china/
Saturday, August 19, 2017
"Student evaluation of teaching ratings and student learning are not related"
Highlights
- Students do not learn more from professors with higher student evaluation of teaching (SET) ratings.
- Previus meta-analyses of SET/learning correlations in multisection studies are not interprettable.
- Re-analyses of previous meta-analyses of multisection studies indicate that SET ratings explain at most 1% of variability in measures of student learning.
- New meta-analyses of multisection studies show that SET ratings are unrelated to student learning.
Abstract
Student evaluation of teaching (SET) ratings are used to evaluate faculty's teaching effectiveness based on a widespread belief that students learn more from highly rated professors. The key evidence cited in support of this belief are meta-analyses of multisection studies showing small-to-moderate correlations between SET ratings and student achievement (e.g., Cohen, 1980, 1981; Feldman, 1989). We re-analyzed previously published meta-analyses of the multisection studies and found that their findings were an artifact of small sample sized studies and publication bias. Whereas the small sample sized studies showed large and moderate correlation, the large sample sized studies showed no or only minimal correlation between SET ratings and learning. Our up-to-date meta-analysis of all multisection studies revealed no significant correlations between the SET ratings and learning. These findings suggest that institutions focused on student learning and career success may want to abandon SET ratings as a measure of faculty's teaching effectiveness.
--Bob Uttl, Carmela A. White, and Daniela Wong Gonzalez
Tuesday, August 15, 2017
Fwd: Resources re: UVA
From a reader who wishes to remain anonymous:
Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) Guide: The Alt-Right on Campus: What Students Need to Know
https://www.splcenter.org/20170810/alt-right-campus-what-students-need-know
What UVA did wrong when white supremacists came to campus
http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-harper-davis-uva-white-supremacists-20170812-story.html
When White Supremacists Descend, What Can a College President Do?
http://www.chronicle.com/article/When-White-Supremacists/240913/
What it’s like to be a Black student as white supremacists march in your college town
https://www.vox.com/first-person/2017/5/19/15663516/robert-e-lee-statue-charlottesville-richard-spencer
Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) Guide: The Alt-Right on Campus: What Students Need to Know
https://www.splcenter.org/20170810/alt-right-campus-what-students-need-know
What UVA did wrong when white supremacists came to campus
http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-harper-davis-uva-white-supremacists-20170812-story.html
When White Supremacists Descend, What Can a College President Do?
http://www.chronicle.com/article/When-White-Supremacists/240913/
What it’s like to be a Black student as white supremacists march in your college town
https://www.vox.com/first-person/2017/5/19/15663516/robert-e-lee-statue-charlottesville-richard-spencer
Saturday, August 12, 2017
Middle-of-August Thirsty.
This stuff at/near UVA is utterly sobering. Again, so sad. Devastating. Senseless.
And I wonder how informed most of our people are--and what we can do about it.
Have you actually read the google manifesto?
Communist Manifesto?
The Bible/Koran/Talmud?
Little Black Sambo?
Mein Kampf?
Etc...?
Does your school's library have copies available to its community members? Or the capacity for librarians to show students how to access these books online?
The Great Books programs at St. John's, Shimer, and Columbia are the first that come to mind. But then there are lots of others. And does it matter?
Should every adult in America have read Shakespeare, Schopenhauer, Thoreau, bell hooks, Virginia Woolf, the Upanishads, or the Tractatus?
How do we teach truth, beauty, empathy, and virtue? Do we even want to?
And I wonder how informed most of our people are--and what we can do about it.
Have you actually read the google manifesto?
Communist Manifesto?
The Bible/Koran/Talmud?
Little Black Sambo?
Mein Kampf?
Etc...?
Does your school's library have copies available to its community members? Or the capacity for librarians to show students how to access these books online?
The Great Books programs at St. John's, Shimer, and Columbia are the first that come to mind. But then there are lots of others. And does it matter?
Should every adult in America have read Shakespeare, Schopenhauer, Thoreau, bell hooks, Virginia Woolf, the Upanishads, or the Tractatus?
How do we teach truth, beauty, empathy, and virtue? Do we even want to?
Tuesday, August 8, 2017
Walter-versary. Ten Years Ago on RYS.
Wednesday, August 8, 2007
Where We Don't Even Pretend To Try and Figure Out What To Write For a Title
A professed fan of the site sends along this list of "ideas":
Y'all gone soft there at RYS. There was a time when you put the cart in front of the horse, or just ate the horse for lunch and pushed the cart down the mountain. Now y'all just nice and polite and it's making me a little sick. (Look, I think I just threw up in my mouth a little.)
Well, I've come to save the day. I want to be one of those "chief correspondents" you are always yammering about. I want to be recognized for my wisdom and perspciapacity or whatever. I want you to marvel at my ideas, give me a shocking title and a cool blurry graphic. I want to be in with the COOL KIDZ.
So, here are my suggestions for the coming year. I am in my new office at my old school and I've got a new laptop that the Dean had to buy me because I'm such a research stud, and I'm about to let loose with some ideas that will make your little website as popular as http://www.IFartedForMyPhd.com/ or http://www.UnmarriedBitterSingleProfessorWithACat.org/. Feel free to use these, but make sure you give credit to me - a chief correspondent in the sciences from a slamming R1 in Texas.
Okay, so just let me know how amazed you are by all of that. And I didn't even break a sweat. You can thank me at some convention some time. I'm always asking colleagues, "Yo, are you the Rate Your Students guy, huh? Would you tell me?" I'll find you, you bastard, I really will.
Sign me,
Wicked Walter from Waxahachie
(that's nothing...I got a million of them)
Where We Don't Even Pretend To Try and Figure Out What To Write For a Title
A professed fan of the site sends along this list of "ideas":
Y'all gone soft there at RYS. There was a time when you put the cart in front of the horse, or just ate the horse for lunch and pushed the cart down the mountain. Now y'all just nice and polite and it's making me a little sick. (Look, I think I just threw up in my mouth a little.)
Well, I've come to save the day. I want to be one of those "chief correspondents" you are always yammering about. I want to be recognized for my wisdom and perspciapacity or whatever. I want you to marvel at my ideas, give me a shocking title and a cool blurry graphic. I want to be in with the COOL KIDZ.
So, here are my suggestions for the coming year. I am in my new office at my old school and I've got a new laptop that the Dean had to buy me because I'm such a research stud, and I'm about to let loose with some ideas that will make your little website as popular as http://www.IFartedForMyPhd.com/ or http://www.UnmarriedBitterSingleProfessorWithACat.org/. Feel free to use these, but make sure you give credit to me - a chief correspondent in the sciences from a slamming R1 in Texas.
- Every Friday, post a picture of the cutest ass in someone's class. Profs can turn the tables and whip out their own cell phones and capture a hunnie or a hunk. You could post them with funny captions. I can think of a hundred ideas already.
- Every Saturday and Sunday, turn the blog over to a random professor. Just tell someone to write a "smackdown" of their own and then watch the vitriol fly!
- Start identifying students with more comical descriptions and made up names. Saying "Bitchy Brenda" is not enough. Say that Brenda is a petite 5'3" brunette made up of sugar and spice, oregano and combat boots, and that she often has tunafish in her hair...and you get my drift. Spice it up, I guess. This is not TELEVISION, MAN, it's the written word, and let Chaucer and Le Carre and Cussler be our models...describe, describe, describe!
- Put an immediate kibosh on any post that starts with one of these: 1) I love my students..., 2) My students work hard..., 3) I care about my students... and you get the drift. Those posts always suck. They're always introspective and that's pure death on any of these blogs. Just quit posting shit like that and you'll stop getting such lousy submissions.
- Just quit trying to be so serious. All of the people in my department are dunderheads, old farts who are on the long slow decline to dementia and retirement (at the same time, do you get me?!?!). If I wanted to be bored to death I'd go talk to them. I come to RYS for some fun. It's not rocket science, baby. This is a blog that's supposed to rip a new one to those students who turn our classes into daymares. So let's have some fun with it.
Okay, so just let me know how amazed you are by all of that. And I didn't even break a sweat. You can thank me at some convention some time. I'm always asking colleagues, "Yo, are you the Rate Your Students guy, huh? Would you tell me?" I'll find you, you bastard, I really will.
Sign me,
Wicked Walter from Waxahachie
(that's nothing...I got a million of them)