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2009
(216)
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August
(45)
- What's the Matter with UCOP?
- UCSB Call for Campus Response to UCOP Furlough Ruling
- UCOP Mandate Morally and Politically Unacceptable
- UC Berkeley Shortens Teaching Term
- The Faculty Stands Alone
- UCOP on Furloughs: We're the Deciders!
- Chris Newfield in Chronicle not today but some ten...
- From UC-AFT: Call for No Confidence Vote
- Turn it around; don’t give it away: AAUP Statement...
- Letter to Gary Strong, UCLA University Librarian
- And Sometimes We Get Boethian Dream Visions
- University of North Carolina Administration Grows ...
- on-line education, the 11th campus
- Who Are the High Earners in the UC System (x-post)
- Byron Williams: University of California Regents d...
- We Get Letters: UCSC Loses Its Child Care
- University of Southern Miss is considering the eli...
- Should Berkeley Be Michigan? Dialgoue on Privatiza...
- Emerging Furlough Standards and Goals
- I Have Some Questions
- Sign Up Time
- The Economist Takes Notice
- Option Four Videos of Yudof Q & A and Lisa Hajjar ...
- CSU Chancellor in SF Chronicle
- News from the Santa Barbara Yudof Protests
- Robert Samuels' blog, "Changing Universities"
- SF Chronicle: Execs Still Get Raises
- Recession Realities in Higher Education
- Indeed, "what of the children?"
- So...what business are we in again?
- We Sometimes Get Letters Addressed to Other People
- Show Me the Money
- Another great piece by Jeffrey Wasserstrom
- UC / CSU budget cuts from Associated Press (correc...
- Option 4: 1st Annual Bad Business Award
- Please read Gerry's 2nd comment in previous post
- The Real Reasons to Support Language Study
- We Get Letters: On Dean Edley's Distance Learning ...
- From CUCFA: Legal Update on The Emergency
- Robert Williams: Press Conference Statement (7/29)
- Robert Samuels: Giving Up on Education at UCLA?
- Option 4: Follow the Money
- Marc Bousquet on the Rise of the Executive Class i...
- Michael Meranze, "Jefferson's Epitaph"
- Charlie Schartz, "Do Public Colleges Rip Off Stude...
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August
(45)
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1 comments:
Short form. UC Davis faculty votes 82% in favor of taking furlough days during instruction. Blog post says, this is good policy and even on reflection good politics, teaching students that taxes = services.
(my gloss: like the students don't know this really keenly and weren't already paying--how does this work again? "We faculty are going to hurt you a bit because we want you to know that we have to do this to make a very public case that we are valiantly trying to help you--so please cry out, we need you to cry out for us--but direct your cries at the administration and the state who made us make this rational and ultimately righteous choice--or you and folks like you will have to pay a lot more for a worser education to support my salary or whoever less qualified replaces me, if anyone will replace me, because I only took this job because UC had a great reputation and offered better pay so I moved out here where it is way expensive to live the dream at least as far as an academic dares dream it which was for the most part better than most anywhere else but now I have a mortgage that gives me the heebie-jeebies and I'm not about to be the patsy in what is shaping up to be a bait and switch because the state is screwed up and I'm not apparently as important as assistant treasurers or prison guards, so we're going to hurt someone I should care about to show how damned upset we really are and this had better work").
The comments thread there reprises a usual split of themes. Loosely,
a)Quality education is expensive and people should pay or see a loss of services deliberately made harsher to prove the point; teaching is as real world as anything else; teachers didn't take a vow of poverty. Crisis or not, we have to hurt someone visibly this time.
b) Economic pain is all around, and despite everything else, teaching is a calling not a self-interested personal money making activity, so faculty should mitigate the effect on students, weak and distasteful as that may be.
FWIW, I think this dichotomy of responses is a symptom not an actual argument, more like reprising a graveside conversation, and the real action is elsewhere.
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