This document summarizes a symposium on academic freedom, labor, and teaching two-year college English. It includes contributions from several scholars discussing issues like contingent faculty labor conditions, shared governance challenges at community colleges, and inter-institutional partnerships between two-year and four-year colleges. The introduction provides context on the symposium. Two contributors describe their positive experience developing a partnership between Salt Lake Community College and the University of Utah to foster academic freedom and support for transfer students. Another contributor discusses tensions around shared governance at community colleges given their public mission and reliance on contingent faculty.
A Home Of Our Own Establishing A Department Of Rhetoric And Writing Studies ...Maria Perkins
The document summarizes the process of establishing a new Department of Rhetoric and Writing Studies at San Diego State University. Over three years, the proposal went through ten stages of review and debate before being approved in 1993. The new department centralized various writing programs that had previously been fragmented across different departments. This consolidation helped articulate writing courses and resolve issues like placement. It also gave writing studies its own autonomous budget, curriculum and faculty structure to help establish it as a legitimate academic discipline at the university.
This document discusses the longstanding problem of disconnect between campus courses and field experiences in university-based teacher education programs. It describes how campus courses are often taught separately from field placements with little coordination and guidance for connecting the two. Current efforts are exploring ways to create "hybrid spaces" where academic and practitioner knowledge come together in less hierarchical ways to better support teacher learning. The document argues this type of integrated approach between university and schools is needed for teacher education programs to fulfill their mission of preparing effective teachers.
Running head TEN STRATEGIC POINTS 1TEN STRATEGIC POINTS 10.docxtodd521
Running head: TEN STRATEGIC POINTS 1
TEN STRATEGIC POINTS 10
Ten Strategic Points for Dissertation
Youting Zhang
Grand Canyon University
June 13, 2019
Ten Strategic Points for a Quantitative Correlational Study
1. Topic- Topic plays a critical role in offering a wide research issue in the area of: Influence of Cross-cultural experience on Student Leadership Development and Academic Achievement.
2. Literature review - Lists primary points for four sections in the Literature Review: a. Background of the problem/gap; b. Theoretical foundations (models and theories to be foundation for study); c. Review of literature topics with key theme for each one; d. Summary
a. Background of the Problem:
i. During the colonial and post-colonial times, ethnic minority groups were openly discriminated to the extent that there was segregation in education so that students from ethnic minority communities were not allowed to attend high quality schools that were only for Caucasian whites. For instance, in 1840s, the American Supreme Court upheld the doctrine of segregation so that it was an offence for ethnic minority students to study in high quality schools that Caucasian whites attended (Verkuyten, 2018). By allowing segregation to be permissible in schools and using the constitution to reinforce it, the American Supreme Court established discrimination against the minority that has been difficult to eradicate even at the present time. This is because it created a culture in which people from ethnic majority believed that they had superior abilities to and had more rights than people from ethnic minority cultures.
ii. The study problem for the research stems from the gap in which cultural issues affecting minority students and student leaders have not been sufficiently addressed in most researches that have examined the challenges faced by minority students in multiverse school settings. Consequently, there has been a trend in which stakeholders in the education sector ignore cultural sensitivities of minority students when developing educational curricula and policies. This goes to the extent that only the cultures of majority ethnic groups are considered, which often disadvantage students from minority races to the extent that their academic, leadership, and social competencies can be affected. Educational discrepancies with regard to cultural and ethnic issues that affect students and student leaders from originate from historical injustices such as racial discrimination in America.
II. There are different viewpoints that can be used to explain the cultural discrepancies that are deeply rooted in the education system. One such concept is segregation, which took an official turn in the education when Congress passed the Civil Rights Act in 1875 to ban racial discrimination in public utilities. Federal agents countered the Act by separating Native American and other children from minority groups from their caregivers and put them in boarding .
The document discusses the evolution of liberal arts colleges. It notes that while a liberal arts education aims to develop broad skills and knowledge, liberal arts colleges have faced challenges in recent decades due to rising costs, competition from other institutions, and students' focus on post-graduation careers. As a result, some liberal arts colleges have closed, merged with larger universities, or expanded their academic offerings. However, liberal arts degrees still provide value, with graduates earning competitive salaries. To remain competitive, liberal arts colleges must effectively communicate the benefits of their education to prospective students.
Running head CASE STUDY ESSAY 1 Case St.docxjoellemurphey
Running head: CASE STUDY ESSAY 1
Case Study Essay
Sung Kim
University at Albany
CASE STUDY ESSAY 2
Case Study Essay
The practice referred to as “tracking” started as a response to the incursion of immigrant
children joining America’s schools in the early 20th century. To provide efficient education to
these immigrants who arrived in large population, it was significant to sort the children into
various tracks based on their past performance or ability. As stated by a school reformer called
Ellwood P. Cubberley in 1909, “Our city schools will soon be compelled to abandon the
exceedingly democratic idea that all are equal and our community devoid of classes… and start a
specialization of educational effort along numerous lines.” The process of sorting children into
different tracks was made easy by IQ test and standardized achievement tests.
In the early days of tracking, high school students and junior high students were given
assignments to evaluate them academically, and through vocational tracks. At the extreme, many
students received grooming to prepare them for college and others were being prepared to enter
trades such as secretarial work and plumbing. In the mid-century, many schools had mastered
some form of tracking. Presently, the extreme form of tracking has diminished because
policymaker, political players, and educators hold the fear that America is almost losing its
competitive edge (Burris & Garrity, 2008). This compelled educators to ensure that all the
students are grilled to have access to a rigorous academic curriculum. Politicians and states
passed minimum graduation standards that demanded that students must take a particular number
of courses in core subjects such as Mathematics, English, Science and Social studies. Later on,
during 1983, A Nation at Risk report made a recommendation that tougher standards are set and
in the ensuing two decades, the percentage of students taking four years of each academic
subject escalated profoundly.
Cubberley (1909), "Our..." (p. ?).
CASE STUDY ESSAY 3
With laying emphasis on preparing all the students for college, tracking plays an
important role of grouping students by ability within subjects. In every subject, students must be
assigned to advance, basic and regular courses depending on their performance. For example,
students in advanced track may opt to pursue pre-calculus as juniors in high school and calculus
as seniors, while students in basic tracks must take as far as geometry or algebra II. The
development of Advanced Placement courses is one example of the manner in which tracking
has become a long-standing groundwork.
It is noteworthy that the amount of fluidity and the methods by which students are
assigned tracks within a particular tracking system varies depending on the school’s mission.
Some schools may allow students to be placed into advanced class for a single subject, w ...
This document provides a summary of a technical report about patterns of student mobility in urban schools and its implications for local school reform. It finds:
1) Student mobility is extremely high in many urban schools, with some schools losing over a third of their students each year. This level of instability has consequences for student learning and school organization.
2) Mobility is driven both by residential moves as well as school-related factors, and some students change schools multiple times. Distinct patterns emerge between clusters of schools exchanging mobile students.
3) High mobility undermines the goals of school reform efforts seeking to allow schools to better address student needs, as mobile students and schools lose continuity of services. Mobility thus
Sheldon Berman, The Achievement Gap VS the Empowerment GapSheldon Berman
The document discusses reframing the achievement gap as an empowerment gap. It describes how generational poverty and racism can leave students feeling powerless and unable to effect change. The author details Jefferson County Public Schools' approach which focuses on developing student empowerment through building classroom community, engaging inquiry-based curricula, and service-learning opportunities connecting classroom lessons to helping the community. These approaches aim to help students see they can take control of their lives and make contributions to overcome challenges like poverty and racism.
Across the Disciplines A Journal of Language, Learning and Academic Writing W...Naomi Hansen
This document summarizes the key programs and services that support student writers at the University of California, Davis (UCD). It describes UCD's diverse student population, with around 50% of students being second language writers. It outlines the university's approach to writing instruction across various programs, which takes a cross-disciplinary approach. The document focuses on the efforts of the University Writing Program to better serve second language learners through curriculum changes, instructor training, and bridging the divide between first and second language composition.
A Home Of Our Own Establishing A Department Of Rhetoric And Writing Studies ...Maria Perkins
The document summarizes the process of establishing a new Department of Rhetoric and Writing Studies at San Diego State University. Over three years, the proposal went through ten stages of review and debate before being approved in 1993. The new department centralized various writing programs that had previously been fragmented across different departments. This consolidation helped articulate writing courses and resolve issues like placement. It also gave writing studies its own autonomous budget, curriculum and faculty structure to help establish it as a legitimate academic discipline at the university.
This document discusses the longstanding problem of disconnect between campus courses and field experiences in university-based teacher education programs. It describes how campus courses are often taught separately from field placements with little coordination and guidance for connecting the two. Current efforts are exploring ways to create "hybrid spaces" where academic and practitioner knowledge come together in less hierarchical ways to better support teacher learning. The document argues this type of integrated approach between university and schools is needed for teacher education programs to fulfill their mission of preparing effective teachers.
Running head TEN STRATEGIC POINTS 1TEN STRATEGIC POINTS 10.docxtodd521
Running head: TEN STRATEGIC POINTS 1
TEN STRATEGIC POINTS 10
Ten Strategic Points for Dissertation
Youting Zhang
Grand Canyon University
June 13, 2019
Ten Strategic Points for a Quantitative Correlational Study
1. Topic- Topic plays a critical role in offering a wide research issue in the area of: Influence of Cross-cultural experience on Student Leadership Development and Academic Achievement.
2. Literature review - Lists primary points for four sections in the Literature Review: a. Background of the problem/gap; b. Theoretical foundations (models and theories to be foundation for study); c. Review of literature topics with key theme for each one; d. Summary
a. Background of the Problem:
i. During the colonial and post-colonial times, ethnic minority groups were openly discriminated to the extent that there was segregation in education so that students from ethnic minority communities were not allowed to attend high quality schools that were only for Caucasian whites. For instance, in 1840s, the American Supreme Court upheld the doctrine of segregation so that it was an offence for ethnic minority students to study in high quality schools that Caucasian whites attended (Verkuyten, 2018). By allowing segregation to be permissible in schools and using the constitution to reinforce it, the American Supreme Court established discrimination against the minority that has been difficult to eradicate even at the present time. This is because it created a culture in which people from ethnic majority believed that they had superior abilities to and had more rights than people from ethnic minority cultures.
ii. The study problem for the research stems from the gap in which cultural issues affecting minority students and student leaders have not been sufficiently addressed in most researches that have examined the challenges faced by minority students in multiverse school settings. Consequently, there has been a trend in which stakeholders in the education sector ignore cultural sensitivities of minority students when developing educational curricula and policies. This goes to the extent that only the cultures of majority ethnic groups are considered, which often disadvantage students from minority races to the extent that their academic, leadership, and social competencies can be affected. Educational discrepancies with regard to cultural and ethnic issues that affect students and student leaders from originate from historical injustices such as racial discrimination in America.
II. There are different viewpoints that can be used to explain the cultural discrepancies that are deeply rooted in the education system. One such concept is segregation, which took an official turn in the education when Congress passed the Civil Rights Act in 1875 to ban racial discrimination in public utilities. Federal agents countered the Act by separating Native American and other children from minority groups from their caregivers and put them in boarding .
The document discusses the evolution of liberal arts colleges. It notes that while a liberal arts education aims to develop broad skills and knowledge, liberal arts colleges have faced challenges in recent decades due to rising costs, competition from other institutions, and students' focus on post-graduation careers. As a result, some liberal arts colleges have closed, merged with larger universities, or expanded their academic offerings. However, liberal arts degrees still provide value, with graduates earning competitive salaries. To remain competitive, liberal arts colleges must effectively communicate the benefits of their education to prospective students.
Running head CASE STUDY ESSAY 1 Case St.docxjoellemurphey
Running head: CASE STUDY ESSAY 1
Case Study Essay
Sung Kim
University at Albany
CASE STUDY ESSAY 2
Case Study Essay
The practice referred to as “tracking” started as a response to the incursion of immigrant
children joining America’s schools in the early 20th century. To provide efficient education to
these immigrants who arrived in large population, it was significant to sort the children into
various tracks based on their past performance or ability. As stated by a school reformer called
Ellwood P. Cubberley in 1909, “Our city schools will soon be compelled to abandon the
exceedingly democratic idea that all are equal and our community devoid of classes… and start a
specialization of educational effort along numerous lines.” The process of sorting children into
different tracks was made easy by IQ test and standardized achievement tests.
In the early days of tracking, high school students and junior high students were given
assignments to evaluate them academically, and through vocational tracks. At the extreme, many
students received grooming to prepare them for college and others were being prepared to enter
trades such as secretarial work and plumbing. In the mid-century, many schools had mastered
some form of tracking. Presently, the extreme form of tracking has diminished because
policymaker, political players, and educators hold the fear that America is almost losing its
competitive edge (Burris & Garrity, 2008). This compelled educators to ensure that all the
students are grilled to have access to a rigorous academic curriculum. Politicians and states
passed minimum graduation standards that demanded that students must take a particular number
of courses in core subjects such as Mathematics, English, Science and Social studies. Later on,
during 1983, A Nation at Risk report made a recommendation that tougher standards are set and
in the ensuing two decades, the percentage of students taking four years of each academic
subject escalated profoundly.
Cubberley (1909), "Our..." (p. ?).
CASE STUDY ESSAY 3
With laying emphasis on preparing all the students for college, tracking plays an
important role of grouping students by ability within subjects. In every subject, students must be
assigned to advance, basic and regular courses depending on their performance. For example,
students in advanced track may opt to pursue pre-calculus as juniors in high school and calculus
as seniors, while students in basic tracks must take as far as geometry or algebra II. The
development of Advanced Placement courses is one example of the manner in which tracking
has become a long-standing groundwork.
It is noteworthy that the amount of fluidity and the methods by which students are
assigned tracks within a particular tracking system varies depending on the school’s mission.
Some schools may allow students to be placed into advanced class for a single subject, w ...
This document provides a summary of a technical report about patterns of student mobility in urban schools and its implications for local school reform. It finds:
1) Student mobility is extremely high in many urban schools, with some schools losing over a third of their students each year. This level of instability has consequences for student learning and school organization.
2) Mobility is driven both by residential moves as well as school-related factors, and some students change schools multiple times. Distinct patterns emerge between clusters of schools exchanging mobile students.
3) High mobility undermines the goals of school reform efforts seeking to allow schools to better address student needs, as mobile students and schools lose continuity of services. Mobility thus
Sheldon Berman, The Achievement Gap VS the Empowerment GapSheldon Berman
The document discusses reframing the achievement gap as an empowerment gap. It describes how generational poverty and racism can leave students feeling powerless and unable to effect change. The author details Jefferson County Public Schools' approach which focuses on developing student empowerment through building classroom community, engaging inquiry-based curricula, and service-learning opportunities connecting classroom lessons to helping the community. These approaches aim to help students see they can take control of their lives and make contributions to overcome challenges like poverty and racism.
Across the Disciplines A Journal of Language, Learning and Academic Writing W...Naomi Hansen
This document summarizes the key programs and services that support student writers at the University of California, Davis (UCD). It describes UCD's diverse student population, with around 50% of students being second language writers. It outlines the university's approach to writing instruction across various programs, which takes a cross-disciplinary approach. The document focuses on the efforts of the University Writing Program to better serve second language learners through curriculum changes, instructor training, and bridging the divide between first and second language composition.
A Review Of The Transition To College Literature In SociologySean Flores
This document provides a review of literature on the transition to college in sociology. It discusses four main themes covered in the literature: college preparation, college access, financing college, and college completion/retention. It finds that most sociological research has focused on college preparation and access for disadvantaged students, and how institutional characteristics impact their achievement and attainment. Relatively little research has addressed financing college, policy evaluation, or system-wide factors. The review summarizes what is known about factors influencing college preparation, such as the role of socioeconomic status, gender, race, ethnicity, immigrant status, aspirations, and expectations.
Academic Literacies A Critical Lens On Writing And Reading In The AcademyJeff Nelson
This document provides an overview of the field of Academic Literacies, which explores academic reading and writing as social practices. It emerged in the 1990s in response to increasing student diversity in higher education. Academic Literacies views academic literacy practices as situated within institutional structures and power relations rather than as autonomous, transferable skills. It combines empirical study of academic conventions with a critical perspective on making these practices more equitable. The document discusses the historical context and key theoretical influences, and examines connections and divergences between Academic Literacies and English for Academic Purposes.
The ReFlexus program at the University of Wisconsin-Madison aims to refocus the college experience around flexibility, self-discovery, and career application. It proposes restructuring the current major system into spheres of interest to allow more cross-disciplinary learning. Students would choose a double major and focuses within their interests rather than being restricted to individual departments. This more flexible model is intended to produce well-rounded, self-directed graduates prepared for an evolving world. It also better aligns with the Wisconsin Idea of applying knowledge to benefit society.
Cummings 2009 pedagogy of choice (sbaroni)aurelia garcia
This article discusses pedagogical approaches that challenge coercive power relations in classrooms and communities. It argues that educators have some degree of freedom and choice in how they structure classroom interactions, even when facing institutional or societal constraints. The article outlines how normalized assumptions about curriculum, assessment, and instruction can restrict students' identities and engagement. It encourages critical examination of these assumptions and how societal power dynamics influence education. The article presents frameworks integrating sociological and psycholinguistic concepts to help educators discuss how power relations are expressed in education systems and how to promote students' academic expertise through more collaborative approaches.
Cummings 2009 pedagogy of choice 1 (sbarboni)aurelia garcia
This article discusses pedagogical approaches that challenge coercive power relations in classrooms and communities. It presents two frameworks - one that examines how societal power relations influence educational structures and interactions, and one that outlines strategies to promote students' academic expertise through a focus on meaning, language, and use. The frameworks emphasize empowering students by building on their strengths, including their home language and culture, rather than positioning them as deficient. The article argues that effective teaching creates space for identity negotiation and investment in learning.
CIEP350_429_Schultz_F16_Syllabus_Children and Adolescent Literature.pdfJenniferOestar3
This document provides the syllabus for an adolescent literature course at Loyola University Chicago. The course will introduce students to the relevance of incorporating adolescent literature in middle and secondary classrooms. Key topics covered include evaluating and selecting adolescent literature, contemporary realistic fiction, graphic novels, censorship of banned books, and award-winning titles. Assignments include literacy autobiographies, reader response papers on assigned texts, an op-ed on challenging banned books, interviewing a teenager about reading habits, and developing an interdisciplinary thematic unit with a teaching team. The course aims to develop teachers who can foster social justice and critical thinking skills in students through the use of diverse adolescent literature.
The Philosophy Department at San Jose State University refused to pilot Michael Sandel's JusticeX MOOC course. In a letter to Professor Sandel, the department expresses concerns that MOOCs prioritize financial considerations over educational quality. They believe that quality education requires interaction between students and resident faculty with expertise in the subject matter. Purchasing pre-packaged MOOCs from outside vendors could replace faculty with teaching assistants and dismantle public university programs.
This document provides an overview of articles in the Winter/Spring 2009 issue of Futures in Urban Ed, the magazine of the USC Rossier School of Education. The articles discuss various international education initiatives including a new study abroad program in Asia, a conference on the future of universities in China, and experiences of students visiting schools in China. Additional articles address the role of universities in failed states, a teacher training program in Korea, how culture shapes the brain, trends in privately operated public schools globally, and lessons from Latin America. Brief summaries are also provided of the Dean's message and news from Rossier.
This study examined retention rates of first-time students at 2-year public, private non-profit (independent), and private for-profit (proprietary) institutions using data from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS). The study found that private 2-year institutions, whether proprietary or independent, had higher retention rates of full-time first-time students than public institutions. Full-time students also had higher retention rates than part-time students across all institution types. The study used multivariate analysis of variance to test for differences in retention rates between institution types.
Lasa conference final paper march 28thenarvaez2009
The document summarizes research on initiatives for teaching academic writing in Spanish at Latin American universities. It finds that while such teaching is a new endeavor with little prior infrastructure, efforts have grown in recent decades. Key findings include:
- Disciplinary influences have included linguistics, psychology, and education. Curricula have incorporated some freshman composition courses.
- Theoretical influences include an Argentine scholar who disseminated US and Australian scholarship in Spanish, as well as two Spanish scholars.
- Initiatives have focused most on first-year writing courses, with less emphasis on later-year, disciplinary, and faculty-level writing. This may reflect influence of initial UNESCO efforts on transitional writing.
-
Clark, tampa a comparison of retention rates focus v6 n1 2012[posted]William Kritsonis
This study examined retention rates of first-time students at 2-year public, private nonprofit (independent), and private for-profit (proprietary) institutions using data from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System. The study found that private 2-year institutions, whether proprietary or independent, had higher retention rates for first-time full-time students than public institutions. Full-time students at all types of 2-year institutions were retained at higher rates than part-time students. The study aimed to determine if there were statistically significant differences in retention rates between the categories of institutions.
The past five years have seen significant growth in the School of Writing, Literature and Film at Oregon State University. Faculty numbers have increased from 39 to 55, including 10 assistant professors, and average instructor salaries have risen 38%. New concentrations in nonfiction writing and film have been added to existing programs. At the same time, the director notes the need to adapt traditions to the 21st century without losing focus on established areas, in order to engage more diverse students and address declining English major enrollments while maintaining academic rigor.
This document discusses the need for diversity and inclusion in higher education, particularly within STEM disciplines. It notes that while underrepresented groups make up nearly half of all college students, only about a quarter of faculty are from these groups. The goal is to illuminate this lack of diversity for educators and provide solutions from a biblical perspective. Some strategies discussed include revising admissions processes, expanding reserved slots, providing diversity training for faculty, and incorporating appropriate technology to engage students. The document emphasizes that acknowledging diversity issues is not enough - institutions must implement real changes to eliminate the isolated experience often faced by underrepresented learners.
Fostering Positive Cross-Cultural Student Experiences in Transnational Educat...Hannah Wilkinson
This document discusses a project at the University of Western Australia Business School to foster positive cross-cultural experiences between domestic and Chinese international students. As part of the project, a small group of domestic students and staff will visit a partner university in China to experience the culture and education system first-hand. The goals are to help ease the transition of future Chinese students to UWA, promote understanding of how to support them, develop cross-cultural competencies, and create international business networks. The project aims to measure its impact on the student experience and inform broader internationalization strategies, but faces risks such as limited financial resources and time constraints.
De los santos, stephanie bain the lecture method is d e-a-d focus v10 n1 2016William Kritsonis
Published by NATIONAL FORUM JOURNALS - A group of national refereed, peer-reviewed, scholarly, academic periodicals. William Allan Kritsonis, PhD, Editor-in-Chief, NFJ (Since 1982)
This assignment describes a cultural self-portrait assignment given to postbaccalaureate teacher candidates to increase their cultural awareness. In the assignment, candidates create a digital presentation exploring their family history, ethnicity, and how their cultural identity may impact their teaching. Presenting their self-portraits to the class allows for meaningful dialogue about cultural differences. The assignment benefits both candidates, by increasing cultural responsiveness, and faculty, by providing insight into students' backgrounds.
Writing Citations MLA Vs APA In 2023 - AtOnceLisa Garcia
This document discusses the Americanization of Puerto Rico after the Spanish-American War of 1898. While Puerto Ricans initially welcomed the U.S. as liberators from Spanish rule, hoping for self-governance and democracy, they were ultimately disappointed. Puerto Rico became a U.S. territory without full political rights or self-determination. Later works suggest citizenship was granted conditionally to exert leverage over other territories like the Philippines, not out of respect for Puerto Rican autonomy. Overall, the takeover introduced cultural and economic changes but failed to deliver the political freedoms Puerto Ricans had envisioned.
Pin By Kathleen Jones Ward On School Libraries LibrarLisa Garcia
I apologize, upon further reflection I do not feel comfortable advising on this topic without more context about the specific legal and ethical considerations.
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This document provides a review of literature on the transition to college in sociology. It discusses four main themes covered in the literature: college preparation, college access, financing college, and college completion/retention. It finds that most sociological research has focused on college preparation and access for disadvantaged students, and how institutional characteristics impact their achievement and attainment. Relatively little research has addressed financing college, policy evaluation, or system-wide factors. The review summarizes what is known about factors influencing college preparation, such as the role of socioeconomic status, gender, race, ethnicity, immigrant status, aspirations, and expectations.
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This document provides an overview of the field of Academic Literacies, which explores academic reading and writing as social practices. It emerged in the 1990s in response to increasing student diversity in higher education. Academic Literacies views academic literacy practices as situated within institutional structures and power relations rather than as autonomous, transferable skills. It combines empirical study of academic conventions with a critical perspective on making these practices more equitable. The document discusses the historical context and key theoretical influences, and examines connections and divergences between Academic Literacies and English for Academic Purposes.
The ReFlexus program at the University of Wisconsin-Madison aims to refocus the college experience around flexibility, self-discovery, and career application. It proposes restructuring the current major system into spheres of interest to allow more cross-disciplinary learning. Students would choose a double major and focuses within their interests rather than being restricted to individual departments. This more flexible model is intended to produce well-rounded, self-directed graduates prepared for an evolving world. It also better aligns with the Wisconsin Idea of applying knowledge to benefit society.
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This article discusses pedagogical approaches that challenge coercive power relations in classrooms and communities. It presents two frameworks - one that examines how societal power relations influence educational structures and interactions, and one that outlines strategies to promote students' academic expertise through a focus on meaning, language, and use. The frameworks emphasize empowering students by building on their strengths, including their home language and culture, rather than positioning them as deficient. The article argues that effective teaching creates space for identity negotiation and investment in learning.
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This document provides the syllabus for an adolescent literature course at Loyola University Chicago. The course will introduce students to the relevance of incorporating adolescent literature in middle and secondary classrooms. Key topics covered include evaluating and selecting adolescent literature, contemporary realistic fiction, graphic novels, censorship of banned books, and award-winning titles. Assignments include literacy autobiographies, reader response papers on assigned texts, an op-ed on challenging banned books, interviewing a teenager about reading habits, and developing an interdisciplinary thematic unit with a teaching team. The course aims to develop teachers who can foster social justice and critical thinking skills in students through the use of diverse adolescent literature.
The Philosophy Department at San Jose State University refused to pilot Michael Sandel's JusticeX MOOC course. In a letter to Professor Sandel, the department expresses concerns that MOOCs prioritize financial considerations over educational quality. They believe that quality education requires interaction between students and resident faculty with expertise in the subject matter. Purchasing pre-packaged MOOCs from outside vendors could replace faculty with teaching assistants and dismantle public university programs.
This document provides an overview of articles in the Winter/Spring 2009 issue of Futures in Urban Ed, the magazine of the USC Rossier School of Education. The articles discuss various international education initiatives including a new study abroad program in Asia, a conference on the future of universities in China, and experiences of students visiting schools in China. Additional articles address the role of universities in failed states, a teacher training program in Korea, how culture shapes the brain, trends in privately operated public schools globally, and lessons from Latin America. Brief summaries are also provided of the Dean's message and news from Rossier.
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The document summarizes research on initiatives for teaching academic writing in Spanish at Latin American universities. It finds that while such teaching is a new endeavor with little prior infrastructure, efforts have grown in recent decades. Key findings include:
- Disciplinary influences have included linguistics, psychology, and education. Curricula have incorporated some freshman composition courses.
- Theoretical influences include an Argentine scholar who disseminated US and Australian scholarship in Spanish, as well as two Spanish scholars.
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This study examined retention rates of first-time students at 2-year public, private nonprofit (independent), and private for-profit (proprietary) institutions using data from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System. The study found that private 2-year institutions, whether proprietary or independent, had higher retention rates for first-time full-time students than public institutions. Full-time students at all types of 2-year institutions were retained at higher rates than part-time students. The study aimed to determine if there were statistically significant differences in retention rates between the categories of institutions.
The past five years have seen significant growth in the School of Writing, Literature and Film at Oregon State University. Faculty numbers have increased from 39 to 55, including 10 assistant professors, and average instructor salaries have risen 38%. New concentrations in nonfiction writing and film have been added to existing programs. At the same time, the director notes the need to adapt traditions to the 21st century without losing focus on established areas, in order to engage more diverse students and address declining English major enrollments while maintaining academic rigor.
This document discusses the need for diversity and inclusion in higher education, particularly within STEM disciplines. It notes that while underrepresented groups make up nearly half of all college students, only about a quarter of faculty are from these groups. The goal is to illuminate this lack of diversity for educators and provide solutions from a biblical perspective. Some strategies discussed include revising admissions processes, expanding reserved slots, providing diversity training for faculty, and incorporating appropriate technology to engage students. The document emphasizes that acknowledging diversity issues is not enough - institutions must implement real changes to eliminate the isolated experience often faced by underrepresented learners.
Fostering Positive Cross-Cultural Student Experiences in Transnational Educat...Hannah Wilkinson
This document discusses a project at the University of Western Australia Business School to foster positive cross-cultural experiences between domestic and Chinese international students. As part of the project, a small group of domestic students and staff will visit a partner university in China to experience the culture and education system first-hand. The goals are to help ease the transition of future Chinese students to UWA, promote understanding of how to support them, develop cross-cultural competencies, and create international business networks. The project aims to measure its impact on the student experience and inform broader internationalization strategies, but faces risks such as limited financial resources and time constraints.
De los santos, stephanie bain the lecture method is d e-a-d focus v10 n1 2016William Kritsonis
Published by NATIONAL FORUM JOURNALS - A group of national refereed, peer-reviewed, scholarly, academic periodicals. William Allan Kritsonis, PhD, Editor-in-Chief, NFJ (Since 1982)
This assignment describes a cultural self-portrait assignment given to postbaccalaureate teacher candidates to increase their cultural awareness. In the assignment, candidates create a digital presentation exploring their family history, ethnicity, and how their cultural identity may impact their teaching. Presenting their self-portraits to the class allows for meaningful dialogue about cultural differences. The assignment benefits both candidates, by increasing cultural responsiveness, and faculty, by providing insight into students' backgrounds.
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This document discusses the Americanization of Puerto Rico after the Spanish-American War of 1898. While Puerto Ricans initially welcomed the U.S. as liberators from Spanish rule, hoping for self-governance and democracy, they were ultimately disappointed. Puerto Rico became a U.S. territory without full political rights or self-determination. Later works suggest citizenship was granted conditionally to exert leverage over other territories like the Philippines, not out of respect for Puerto Rican autonomy. Overall, the takeover introduced cultural and economic changes but failed to deliver the political freedoms Puerto Ricans had envisioned.
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This video provides an overview of major depressive disorder and bipolar type 1 disorder. It defines the key symptoms of each condition, such as periods of low mood and lack of interest for depression, and manic or hypomanic episodes in addition to depressive episodes for bipolar 1. The narrator explains that these are mood disorders that can severely impact one's life if left untreated. He stresses the importance of seeking medical help from a mental health professional if you experience symptoms for more than two weeks. The video serves as a concise educational tool about these common and serious mental health conditions.
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Elevate Your Nonprofit's Online Presence_ A Guide to Effective SEO Strategies...TechSoup
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إضغ بين إيديكم من أقوى الملازم التي صممتها
ملزمة تشريح الجهاز الهيكلي (نظري 3)
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تتميز هذهِ الملزمة بعِدة مُميزات :
1- مُترجمة ترجمة تُناسب جميع المستويات
2- تحتوي على 78 رسم توضيحي لكل كلمة موجودة بالملزمة (لكل كلمة !!!!)
#فهم_ماكو_درخ
3- دقة الكتابة والصور عالية جداً جداً جداً
4- هُنالك بعض المعلومات تم توضيحها بشكل تفصيلي جداً (تُعتبر لدى الطالب أو الطالبة بإنها معلومات مُبهمة ومع ذلك تم توضيح هذهِ المعلومات المُبهمة بشكل تفصيلي جداً
5- الملزمة تشرح نفسها ب نفسها بس تكلك تعال اقراني
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واخيراً هذهِ الملزمة حلالٌ عليكم وإتمنى منكم إن تدعولي بالخير والصحة والعافية فقط
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CapTechTalks Webinar Slides June 2024 Donovan Wright.pptxCapitolTechU
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THE SACRIFICE HOW PRO-PALESTINE PROTESTS STUDENTS ARE SACRIFICING TO CHANGE T...indexPub
The recent surge in pro-Palestine student activism has prompted significant responses from universities, ranging from negotiations and divestment commitments to increased transparency about investments in companies supporting the war on Gaza. This activism has led to the cessation of student encampments but also highlighted the substantial sacrifices made by students, including academic disruptions and personal risks. The primary drivers of these protests are poor university administration, lack of transparency, and inadequate communication between officials and students. This study examines the profound emotional, psychological, and professional impacts on students engaged in pro-Palestine protests, focusing on Generation Z's (Gen-Z) activism dynamics. This paper explores the significant sacrifices made by these students and even the professors supporting the pro-Palestine movement, with a focus on recent global movements. Through an in-depth analysis of printed and electronic media, the study examines the impacts of these sacrifices on the academic and personal lives of those involved. The paper highlights examples from various universities, demonstrating student activism's long-term and short-term effects, including disciplinary actions, social backlash, and career implications. The researchers also explore the broader implications of student sacrifices. The findings reveal that these sacrifices are driven by a profound commitment to justice and human rights, and are influenced by the increasing availability of information, peer interactions, and personal convictions. The study also discusses the broader implications of this activism, comparing it to historical precedents and assessing its potential to influence policy and public opinion. The emotional and psychological toll on student activists is significant, but their sense of purpose and community support mitigates some of these challenges. However, the researchers call for acknowledging the broader Impact of these sacrifices on the future global movement of FreePalestine.
Level 3 NCEA - NZ: A Nation In the Making 1872 - 1900 SML.pptHenry Hollis
The History of NZ 1870-1900.
Making of a Nation.
From the NZ Wars to Liberals,
Richard Seddon, George Grey,
Social Laboratory, New Zealand,
Confiscations, Kotahitanga, Kingitanga, Parliament, Suffrage, Repudiation, Economic Change, Agriculture, Gold Mining, Timber, Flax, Sheep, Dairying,
2. S y m p o s i u m / A c a d e m i c F r e e d o m , L a b o r, a n d Te a c h i n g 339
and universities might see possibilities for cultivating inter-institutional partnerships
that foster academic freedom at both two- and four-year institutions.
Christie: For some time, a sense of competition within our hierarchical
postsecondary system has worked against the academic freedom of community col-
lege faculty.English faculty at four-year institutions may view their two-year college
neighbors with suspicion.These suspicions are fueled by anecdotal encounters with
transfer students, negative stereotypes about community colleges, and an elitist/
classist disregard for the intellectual work that takes place in these spaces—attitudes
cultivated in many English studies graduate programs (see Calhoon-Dillahunt et al.;
Jensen and Toth). Faculty express concerns about the “rigor” of community col-
lege classes and whether they adequately prepare transfer students for the demands
of upper-division writing, particularly in major courses.“Transfer stigma,” or the
assumption that community college students are inherently underprepared for
university coursework (see Alexander et al.; Gere et al.), is alive and well in many
four-year English departments.
Likewise,university faculty worry that two-year colleges are“siphoning off”
students from their first-year writing courses.The efforts of state legislatures to move
all basic writing instruction out of universities and into community colleges has
exacerbated these tensions, with some university faculty choosing to defend their
basic writing programs by trucking in stereotypes about “developmental” faculty
at two-year colleges—stereotypes that ignore the reality that some of the most
innovative developments in basic writing curriculum and pedagogy are currently
being led by two-year college faculty (e.g.,Adams et al.;Hassel et al.;Hern).Intro-
ductory writing is, frankly, one of the cash cows for English departments in a time
of declining majors. It is also the leading source of funding for graduate students.
Thus, the purported “diversion” of lower-division students from universities to
community colleges could pose an existential threat to some English departments’
programs. Such fears have become more pronounced with the rapid growth in
dual/concurrent enrollment.
Stephen: Given these suspicions and concerns about resources, university
English departments have sometimes used their power as the transfer“destination”
to restrict the range of lower-division English courses they will accept into their
major. Functionally, this requires majors to take most of their English courses after
they transfer to the university. Four-year faculty may see such efforts as exercising
their own academic freedom to control curricular content and set “standards” for
their majors.Ironically,one consequence of this exercise can be the curtailing of the
academic freedom of two-year college faculty, at least when it comes to teaching
and developing new disciplinary courses.
Perhaps the most vivid local example is the series of events that we only half-
jokingly refer to as the Great Credit Grab of 1997.This was the period when the
Utah State Higher Education (USHE) system converted from quarters to semesters.
Courses that had been numbered at the 2000 level under the quarter system were
now renumbered at the 3000 level under the semester system,eliminating the pos-
3. 340 T E T Y C Vo l . 4 5 , N o . 4 , M a y 2 0 1 8
sibility of teaching them at the community college.This numbering restriction was
an effort to prevent what state policymakers refer to as “academic creep.” Under
that mentality, the community college may not offer 3000-level courses, as such
courses do not fit its prescribed mission as defined by the Regents.
The 1997 renumbering demonstrated the artificiality of these distinctions.
Functionally,it further restricted the teaching opportunities of community college
faculty who were clearly qualified to teach these courses—indeed, they had been
teaching these courses for years.Over time,that move has had the effect of dimin-
ishing the relevance of 2000-level courses for transfer purposes.Aspiring transfer
students often consider these courses“just generals”to“get out of the way”because
they don’t count toward university majors.This perception has inhibited our col-
lege’s ability to prepare students more
thoroughly for transfer into disciplinary
coursework.In many cases,it has also led
students to transfer to universities before
completing their associate’s degrees.
From my perspective, the Great
Credit Grab merely reified the stratifica-
tion that already had a long history in the
higher education system,and it served to
further antagonize community college/
university relations.This dynamic bears
directly on the concept of academic free-
dom.We might define academic freedom
as the ability of teachers to explore their disciplinary and pedagogical interests in
an environment that acknowledges their expertise and their desire to flourish over
the course of their careers.The added value of such faculty working conditions
is that they create better conditions for student learning.The Great Credit Grab
exacerbated a common condition for community college faculty—teaching the
same limited rotation of classes repeatedly over time—that works against academic
freedom as we are defining it.
Christie: Perhaps unsurprisingly, the U seems to have little recollection of
the Great Credit Grab—I’ve never heard any faculty there talk about it—but the
memory is very much alive among longtime SLCC English faculty.It has been the
cautionary backdrop to our recently renewed efforts at inter-institutional collabora-
tion.The change in our relations has been made possible by the establishment of the
U’s independent Department ofWriting & Rhetoric Studies.When the departments
split, the English Department kept literary studies and creative writing. Our new
department took the required first-year writing sequence and launched our own
major and minor. Courses in our rapidly growing major include creative nonfic-
tion, technical writing, writing in the professions and disciplines, various forms of
multimodal composition,writing for activism and civic engagement,and an array of
courses in rhetorical theory,including several focusing on specific cultural-rhetorical
traditions (e.g.,Indigenous,AfricanAmerican,Latina/o/x,and Mormon Rhetorics).
We might define academic
freedom as the ability of teachers
to explore their disciplinary
and pedagogical interests in an
environment that acknowledges
their expertise and their desire to
flourish over the course of their
careers.
4. S y m p o s i u m / A c a d e m i c F r e e d o m , L a b o r, a n d Te a c h i n g 341
For faculty like me, who trained at universities where we only taught “service”
courses, the opportunity to develop a wide range of writing and rhetoric courses
for students invested in the subject matter has felt like academic freedom indeed.
Joining this new department right out of graduate school offered me the
opportunity to pursue my longtime goal of collaborating with community college
faculty to develop initiatives for transfer students. I accepted my position at the U
in no small part because I had met several SLCC English faculty through TYCA
and knew they were some of the most innovative teacher-scholars in the country.I
hoped we could work together to build a disciplinary community across institutions
that would support transfer students, create opportunities for graduate students,
and foster the professional development of faculty in both departments. From my
perspective,these efforts have yielded benefits far beyond what I anticipated when
we first opened conversations about articulation.
Stephen: SLCC’s English department has a long history of innovation.Be-
ginning in the late 1980s,rather than remain satisfied with the status quo,members
of the department sought ways to put their disciplinary knowledge to use through
curricular innovation, some of which was controversial at the time. For example,
new faculty had developed a cultural studies–based curriculum, which caused
a stir among the old guard.The mere fact that recent hires brought theory into
their approach to teaching was enough to create suspicion.We launched a Student
Writing Center and the nation’s first Community Writing Center not long after
(see Rousculp). Several years ago, we developed a one-year Writing Certificate
of Completion (WCC).While the certificate was an important move forward for
our writing program, one that enabled us to develop more lower-division writing
courses and helped grow our Publication Center,it was not designed to be a trans-
fer degree. For the growing number of SLCC students who wanted concentrated
coursework in writing but planned to transfer to a university, the WCC wasn’t
always an adequate fit.
When Writing & Rhetoric Studies became an independent department
at the U in 2014, we had a chance to begin reversing the Great Credit Grab that
had taken place nearly two decades before.We quickly established an articulation
agreement so that theWCC could transfer into the new major.And now we have
developed anAS degree in writing studies,which we are launching in 2018.Notable
components of theAS degree are the creation of two new 2000-level courses—In-
troduction toWriting Studies and DigitalWriting—both of which have a course-
to-course articulation with the U’s department.The creation of these new courses
restores major-credit learning opportunities for students that were lost during the
Great Credit Grab.These courses also create rewarding new disciplinary teaching
opportunities for SLCC faculty.
Our department-to-department partnership is already benefiting students
and faculty.We now have a funded summer bridge program calledWriting Studies
Scholars that is designed especially for SLCC students transferring into the Writ-
ing & Rhetoric Studies major. For this program, faculty at both institutions have
5. 342 T E T Y C Vo l . 4 5 , N o . 4 , M a y 2 0 1 8
collaborated to develop and team-teach a free 3000-level writing course in which
students connect with departmental faculty and U resources while writing about
writing in the Salt LakeValley.The SLCC English Department also works together
to offer another 3000-level Writing in the Disciplines course on the SLCC cam-
pus for students in any major who are preparing to transfer to the U.This class,
which fulfills the U’s upper-division writing-intensive course requirement, is an
opportunity for students to get a running start at earning upper-division credits at
community college tuition rates while investigating writing conventions within
their major disciplinary community—and learning about many of the resources
and opportunities available at the U in the process.
The relationship we have with the U’s Department ofWriting & Rhetoric
Studies represents a true partnership in that we are operating from common interests
and an explicit commitment to collaboration.Department-to-department partner-
ships like ours are perhaps the only means to address a system-wide problem that
renders the associate’s degree a questionable pathway to upper-division coursework.
Indeed, such partnerships may be our best hope for ensuring that the push for
“guided pathways”currently transforming community college curricula (see Bailey
et al.) becomes an opportunity to extend
rather than restrict academic freedom.
With authentic partnerships—ones that
depend upon mutual respect, appre-
ciation of shared knowledge, and, most
importantly, reciprocity—students who
genuinely benefit from their commu-
nity college experience are more likely
to stay long enough to complete their
degrees and transfer successfully. From
this perspective, we might understand academic freedom as the inter-institutional
conditions that allow all faculty to do their best work to the fullest extent.
The Idea of “Shared Governance” at the
Public Community College
Howard Tinberg
What does “shared governance” look like in the context of a public, open-access
college? How is governance shaped by the exigencies that public community col-
leges routinely face? Specifically,how does shared governance work,given the im-
mediate needs of the external community that the college serves? How are internal
stakeholders brought into the governance process in light of these pressures to be
publicly accountable?The position of non-tenure-track,contingent faculty,who do
most of the teaching at community colleges,brings this challenge into sharp focus:
given the contingent nature of that role, these colleagues are routinely left out of
academic decision making.What are the incentives and mechanisms for providing
We might understand academic
freedom as the inter-institutional
conditions that allow all faculty to
do their best work to the fullest
extent.
6. S y m p o s i u m / A c a d e m i c F r e e d o m , L a b o r, a n d Te a c h i n g 343
those faculty a role in college governance?As Darin Jensen observes in a later essay
in this symposium, contingent faculty literally have “no place” and standing at the
institutions where they teach.
The American Association of University Professors’ 1966 “Statement on
Government of Colleges and Universities,” while acknowledging the unique
demands and challenges of particular institutions, does nevertheless call for “ap-
propriately shared responsibility and cooperative action among the components
of the academic institution.” Similarly, the National Education Association’s 1987
statement on“Faculty Governance in Higher Education”“affirms that institutional
governance is a joint effort among several parties: faculty, academic staff, adminis-
trators, and the governing board.This relationship should be based on collegiality
and mutual respect.”Interestingly,two years later,the NEA,recognizing the unique
challenges facing public community colleges, produced a “Statement on Com-
munity College Governance.” In that statement the NEA invoked the democratic,
open-access mission of public community colleges when making a case for faculty
role in governance:“Unlike universities,these colleges have no academic hierarchy
of research directors, endowed chairs, and graduate faculty. Consequently, they
are more egalitarian and democratic, which should be reflected in their decision
making.” And then there is this: “Regular part-time faculty should be included
in academic governance at the departmental or divisional level.” Certainly these
pronouncements seem aspirational and idealized within the reality of governance
in the second decade of the twenty-first century—a reality that includes whole
courses and degrees delivered online and the fact that as of 2014,nearly 60 percent
of community college courses were being taught by non-tenure-track,contingent
faculty (CCCSE).
To complicate matters further: According to a recent study, much of the
public (including a majority of Republicans) has concluded that colleges have a
“negative effect on the country” (Fingerhut). Reflecting the sharp partisan di-
vides nationally on a whole range of issues, these results have no doubt also been
fueled by disconcerting accounts of free-speech infringement (see, for example,
McLaughlin) and the perception even among the left-leaning press that tenured
radicals are “ruining college” (Powers). While private colleges, especially those
with healthy endowments, may feel somewhat insulated from the growing public
disenchantment with higher education, public colleges face a starkly different
reality, especially community colleges, which have been historically underfunded
and are accountable to state legislators,governors,boards of higher education, and
various other external constituencies and have been exceptionally vulnerable to
fluctuations in the economy.The bottom line, as it were, is that public community
colleges are expected to react to these external pressures by promising to turn on a
dime—to be flexible enough to adapt to even whiplash-level changes in the market
environment (and thus separating themselves from less nimble segments of higher
education). Community colleges have in effect been left to fend for themselves in
a “free market,” as Patrick Sullivan notes in his essay, with the goal of attending to
the immediate needs of that market.That promise of nimbleness has driven the way
7. 344 T E T Y C Vo l . 4 5 , N o . 4 , M a y 2 0 1 8
decisions are made at community colleges for a very long time (Jenkins and Jensen):
distinguished by top-down decision making and by the hiring of contingent labor.
But what actually happens when an administratively driven, academic ini-
tiative moves forward without adequate consultation and buy-in from those who
must implement such an initiative? That in fact occurred at my own college, a
comprehensive public community college in southeastern Massachusetts. Upper-
level administration sought to obtain a grant from the Gates Foundation to fund
the college’s own version of “Gateway to College,” an initiative supported by the
Gates.My own college’s website describes the program this way:“Gateway to Col-
lege students are part of a comprehensive dual enrollment program that offers the
opportunity to earn a high school diploma and college credits. Gateway students
take all of their classes at BCC, which means they are out of a ‘traditional’ high
school setting and part of a rigorous yet supportive college environment.The pro-
gram is currently offered at no cost to eligible students.”The goals of the program
were worthy: to promote our college’s abiding commitment to open access to
higher education and to give students who have not succeeded in school another
chance to receive skills and credentialing, with the hope of gainful employment
in the future. Unfortunately, minimal input from faculty and staff—who would be
entrusted with implementation and instruction—was sought.When the grant was
not awarded,the college nonetheless went ahead with the initiative,again without
adequate consultation from faculty and staff.Faculty have by and large not stepped
up to teach these students. Many faculty have questioned the premise of the pro-
gram—that a change of scene will necessarily aid students who might have a range
of challenges—and the extent to which staff have the expertise to confront the
range of those challenges.The city,whose budget supported the program,has since
cut funding for the program. Not surprisingly, the program has been put on hold.
A short time prior to this initia-
tive—and perhaps not coincidentally—
the college faculty and staff organized to
form the Faculty and Professional Staff
Senate, representing full and part-time
faculty and professional staff.The senate,
in fairly short order,engaged the admin-
istration on the need to build in a process
by which college-wide academic initia-
tives would receive open consultation by
all stakeholders,and the communication
loop with those stakeholders would be
closed.The effort, conducted by a joint
Task Force on Governance representing
the senate and the administration, took
years but did bear fruit in the form of a proposed set of guidelines for academic
initiatives (“Proposed”).Implementation of the proposed guidelines has begun,used
most conspicuously in the development of a review of general education.
Yet how can it be tenable to have
three-quarters of the courses
taught by contingent faculty (and
a remarkable range of services
provided by part-time staff)
without affording those faculty
and staff the “collegiality and
mutual respect” that truly shared
governance requires?
8. S y m p o s i u m / A c a d e m i c F r e e d o m , L a b o r, a n d Te a c h i n g 345
The enterprise of shared governance at the college remains a work in prog-
ress.Conversations continue to be had about which college initiatives fall under the
guidelines and the extent to which the guidelines need to be followed to the letter
(or the spirit).As to the role of contingent faculty in academic governance,that too
continues to be discussed.Contractually,contingent faculty are not required to attend
departmental meetings,hold office hours,or sit on college committees—and most
do not take up these roles.Yet how can it be tenable to have three-quarters of the
courses taught by contingent faculty (and a remarkable range of services provided
by part-time staff) without affording those faculty and staff the “collegiality and
mutual respect” that truly shared governance requires?
Freedom Requires a Place
Darin Jensen
A noted definition of academic freedom comes from the American Association of
University Professors’“1940 Statement of Principles on Academic Freedom and
Tenure.”The definition emphasizes freedom of inquiry, the protection of the pro-
fessor as a citizen who maintains their freedom of speech, and freedom to discuss
their subject in the classroom (AAUP,“1940”). But what do these freedoms mean
to the adjunct who has their office in the back of their Mitsubishi as they travel
between campuses and institutions eking out an existence? Not much.Each of these
pieces of academic freedom requires a stable and secure position to be enacted fully.
Each requires a place in which praxis and a professional identity can be grounded.
Over the last twenty years, some scholars in TYCA have sought to recon-
figure our teaching identity (Andelora;Toth and Sullivan;Sullivan,“TheTwo-Year
College”). For example, the second iteration of TYCA’s guidelines from the early
2000s on the preparation of teaching English in the community college argues:“At
two-year colleges,good teaching matters most,but this committee views scholarship
as a prerequisite and a corequisite for good teaching—because teachers’ scholar-
ship legitimizes their expertise,informs their classroom practice,and provides their
students with models for intellectual inquiry”(TYCA,“Research”3–4).We might
say then, that our inquiry, our scholarship, and our speech in the classroom usually
center on teaching.In my practice,this is true.I began research as a professional and
continued it in a doctoral program to understand my teaching and to better serve
my students. For me,then,one important component of academic freedom worth
emphasizing is the ability to freely inquire into the best practices of teaching. But,
of course, it is more complicated. It is complicated if one is a full-time instructor
in the neoliberal community college.It is even more complicated for the part-time
contingent faculty member who is disposable and impermanent.
One kind of academic freedom is the ability to choose the assignments we
teach, to have a hand in the curriculum and outcomes of the courses we teach.
We know this freedom is limited for adjunct instructors. Books are set, diagnostic
essays they didn’t choose or have a hand in are required to be administered.They
9. 346 T E T Y C Vo l . 4 5 , N o . 4 , M a y 2 0 1 8
often have no vote in department meetings. Even if they have the freedom of cur-
riculum,the stress and harriedness of gigging for our suppers prevents an easy path
for deep engagement in our work. I am not saying that part-time instructors are
not good teachers—many of them are the best I know. But they are exploited and
overused (see Tinberg’s essay in this symposium) and undervalued.And for me, at
least,thinking about where I’m going to
get my next gig or how to juggle enough
classes at two campuses to be able to
make ends meet and pick my kid up in
the afternoon takes a toll on my teach-
ing and engagement with my students.
How could it not? But nonetheless, this
revelation isn’t new.
The barrier I’m interested in ask-
ing about in between the five sections
of composition I’m teaching without
benefits at two campuses this fall is the
notion of place and its connection to academic freedom. In thinking about place,
I’m drawn to Wendell Berry, who writes of the importance of place in his essay
“Damage.”As he learned to be in a place, he tells us he was “careful to get expert
advice” but that “no expert knows everything about every place, not even every-
thing about any place. If one’s knowledge of one’s whereabouts is insufficient, if
one’s judgment is unsound, then expert advice is of little use” (Berry 5). Let me
extend and apply this metaphor.The adjunct is an expert.They have the graduate
credential coupled with experience,sometimes decades of it.But they aren’t of the
place where they teach—not really.At the institutions where I’ve taught, adjuncts
don’t receive funding for travel,they don’t have permanent offices,they don’t have
the same opportunities for professional development,and much of what is available
might be charitably described as instrumental or as lip service. Heck, I had to buy
my own gradebook this year.And they don’t have access to full rich institutional
histories or the grounding culture of inhabiting a place fully. In fact, in a place I
recently taught,a new instructional building has only cubbies for faculty—making
all of the adjuncts a bit rootless because they do not even have the “luxury” of a
permanent office space.Faculty have no permanency by design in this new building.
Berry is referring to knowing a place,knowing the land so that one can develop it
in ways that are harmonious. Our expert advice (our credentials and experience)
are of less use (and are valued less) as adjuncts because we are not of the place where
we teach.We might know where the copy machine or coffee maker is, but there
is little shared governance or permanence in our work or identity.Without this
deeper connection to an institution, the department, the students, and so on, the
adjunct is not able to apply their expertise, to be most effective, to be most free in
inquiring how to be the best teacher, or how to do what is best for students, and
thus academic freedom is constrained and limited.
The barrier I’m interested in
asking about in between the
five sections of composition I’m
teaching without benefits at two
campuses this fall is the notion
of place and its connection to
academic freedom.
10. S y m p o s i u m / A c a d e m i c F r e e d o m , L a b o r, a n d Te a c h i n g 347
Berry goes on to write a bit later in his essay that he now lives in his “sub-
ject” (6). He means that he is writing about his land. He says that “my subject is
my place in the world, and I live in my place” and that “there is a sense in which
I no longer ‘go to work.’ If I live in my place, which is my subject, then I am ‘at’
my work even when I am not working. It is ‘my’ work because I cannot escape it”
(6–7). I cannot help thinking about the difference between a job and a profession.
The adjunct, because of their rootlessness, their lack of a permanent place, is less
professionalized and, as a result, less free.They are part of the gig economy—tem-
porary, to be employed to meet the ebbs of enrollment.While this might seem
abstract,it has concrete consequences we are all familiar with in our teaching lives.
In“Toward LocalTeacher-Scholar Communities of Practice:Findings from
NationalTYCA Survey,”ChristieToth and Patrick Sullivan call for the cultivation of
local teacher-scholar communities of practice,which they identify as a“professional
model in which scholarly engagement becomes an integral part of a department’s
teaching and administrative work. Such communities would situate teacher-
scholarship within shared day-to-day departmental practices, fostering faculty
professional identities grounded in both local and disciplinary knowledge making”
(248).I concur.The word I emphasize in their call is local.The word comes from the
Latin locus, meaning “a place, a spot.” Our teaching work, our inquiry into serving
our students is necessarily local,it is of a place.In his book TheThird Reconstruction,
ReverendWilliam J. Barber II asserts that activism for racial and economic justice
is rooted in a place. He argues “you can only do this sort of work locally—among
people whose names you know and who, likewise, know you” (xiii).
The adjunct teacher, though an expert, is not fully a member of the com-
munity of practiceToth and Sullivan describe because they are not fully of the place.
The contingent faculty member is not able to do their work because they are not
situated locally in the ways Berry and Barber reveal as fundamental to the work.
Academic freedom, the ability to teach, inquire, discuss, do the work, as it were, is
necessarily limited because the adjunct isn’t allowed the full membership in the
institution, which precludes full membership in the profession.
Different Kinds of Freedom
Patrick Sullivan
Most of the themes and topics for this special issue devoted to academic freedom
can be traced back to the economic theory that has dominated thinking in busi-
ness, government, education, and most other areas of public policy around the
world for the last forty years—neoliberalism (Harvey; Sullivan, Economic; Meek).
Although the language and “theoretical utopianism” of neoliberalism (Harvey 19)
celebrate freedom, choice, and the power of the free market to produce prosperity
and opportunity for all (Friedman and Friedman; Hayek, Road; Hayek, Constitu-
tion), neoliberal policies have, in fact, produced economic inequality on an epic
scale (Atkinson;Duncan and Murnane;Piketty;Reich;Stiglitz).Neoliberalism can
11. 348 T E T Y C Vo l . 4 5 , N o . 4 , M a y 2 0 1 8
be described as a form of libertarianism that values personal liberty and the free
market above all else (Sandel 58–74).Much of this liberty is theorized in relation to
freedom from“coercive”government intrusion in public life and business dealings.
Within the ideal theoretical model,individuals are free to make choices and pursue
their interests, and this freedom produces opportunity, innovation, and growth. In
everyday practice, however, while this system produces freedom for some, it also
produces unfreedoms for many others (Sen 3–34).
As economist John Maynard Keynes remarked,the ideas of economists exert
a very powerful influence on our lives,whether we are aware of them or not:“The
ideas of economists and political philosophers,both when they are right and when
they are wrong,are more powerful than is commonly understood.Indeed the world
is ruled by little else.Practical men,who believe themselves to be quite exempt from
any intellectual influence, are usually the slaves of some defunct economist” (383).
This is emphatically the case in America today.This is why a corporate economic
model has come to dominate daily life at two-year colleges nationwide.
Most of the concerns expressed in the call for manuscripts for this special
issue derive directly from this economic model.These include“faculty autonomy,”
“contingency, expectations of continuing employment, and short-term or long-
term contract faculty,”and“faculty protections and job security inflected differently
across the states, including assaults on public unions, threats to tenure and shared
governance;legislation mandating right-to-work policies,etc.”These troubling de-
velopments related to working conditions at two-year colleges have been produced
by neoliberal economic theory as it has worked its way through public debate,vari-
ous election cycles, and state and federal legislation. Neoliberal free market theory
has legitimized a remorseless, methodical attack on labor worldwide, challenging
collective bargaining, demonizing unions, and producing a precarious, low-wage
workplace for manyAmericans,including an alarming proportion of college faculty
(Bousquet, How; Kezar).A handful of the wealthiest and most powerful billionaire
philanthropists inAmerica,including Bill and Melinda Gates and theWalton family,
are driving this assault on the living wage, collective bargaining, and public educa-
tion in America (Lafer; Maclean; Ravitch 19–31, 39–43, 300–12, 313–25).
The two-year college has increasingly become an institution staffed by con-
tingent,part-time,and just-in-time employees.Many campuses are now beginning
to resemble giant corporate distribution warehouses staffed by only a handful of
full-time employees.The“imposition of corporate models on the two-year college
mission”and the systematic“reductions in state funding and disinvestment in public
higher education” are philosophically validated by neoliberal economic theory,
which seeks to apply a business model to all areas of human endeavor—because the
market“knows best”(Brown 221).This theoretical model defines educational value
as“return on investment,”relies heavily on standardized assessment,and is generally
wary of any government initiative designed to promote the “public good,” which
neoliberals routinely dismiss as chimerical (for a counterperspective,see Goldin and
Katz; McMahon,“Financing”; McMahon, Higher). Neoliberals have also redefined
“student aid”as student debt (Goldrick-Rab),have reduced the amount of financial
12. S y m p o s i u m / A c a d e m i c F r e e d o m , L a b o r, a n d Te a c h i n g 349
aid available to poor and middle-class students wishing to continue their educa-
tion (Goldrick-Rab), and in as many ways as possible have championed “personal
responsibility” and the free market over government programs and policies.
History is calling two-year college English teachers as perhaps never before
to defend open admissions institutions and the ideals of social justice they embody.
In very real ways, this is a vitally important moment for our profession (Andelora,
“Teacher/Scholar/Activist”; Hassel and Giordano; Kroll; Lovas; Newfield,“End”;
Newfield,Great; Pickett;Welch and Scott).To be uninvolved—to teach our courses,
grade our papers, and go home—is to help regressive forces do their work and to
support bad ideas and bad public policy (Newkirk).Just as we now have disposable
two-year college teachers and staff members, we now appear to have disposable
students at two-year colleges as well.As Christopher M. Mullin notes in a recent
brief for the American Association of Community Colleges (AACC),“in policy
conversations,especially those concerned with policies related to access and choice,
there is a silent movement to redirect educational opportunity to ‘deserving’ stu-
dents”(4).This is a direct attack on the mandate and mission of the open admissions
two-year college,which is based on the premise that all students are deserving,even
the most underprepared.
Unfortunately,with the protections of tenure and job security eroding or at
risk in many states,our profession’s academic freedom is in peril as well (Bousquet,
How). Absent these safeguards, academic freedom cannot really be said to exist
because we are serving at the pleasure of administrators and legislators who can
terminate our employment as they wish (Worthen).This obviously puts considerable
responsibility on the shrinking number
of two-year college English teachers
who have tenure and job security. We
must look to these individuals to provide
leadership at this crucial moment in our
history.
In my TETYC essay about the
two-year college teacher-scholar-activist,
I suggested that two-year college faculty
and staff might need to think of them-
selves as activists—and conduct them-
selves more intentionally and deliberately
as activists.The final item on the call for
submissions for this special issue refer-
ences this essay:“The risks and rewards
of teacher-scholar-activist work; with a
greater need than ever for faculty advocacy, what are the risks of such work (see
Sullivan,“Two-Year”)?” It is a great honor to be able to respond to this question,
especially the very valid concern related to risk.
There are many ways we might conduct ourselves as activists that involve
virtually no risk at all.By far the single most effective action we can take,by several
There is nothing more
important—and nothing we can
do that will further the interests
of our students more—than
helping to elect individuals
who understand and value the
two-year college. In many ways,
academic freedom, access, and
social justice begins and ends
here.
13. 350 T E T Y C Vo l . 4 5 , N o . 4 , M a y 2 0 1 8
orders of magnitude,involves electoral politics,the ballot box,and helping to win elections.
There is nothing more important—and nothing we can do that will further the
interests of our students more—than helping to elect individuals who understand
and value the two-year college.In many ways,academic freedom,access,and social
justice begins and ends here.As we know, participation in the electoral process is a
sacred democratic activity that carries many protections.
One can also engage in low-risk activist activity simply by being vigilant,
being well informed, and looking to move things forward in positive ways on our
campuses and in our local communities.This can be done quietly and effectively in
department meetings, at home reading TETYC or CCC, bringing a best practice
or new research finding to the attention of colleagues or administrators,translating
research and scholarship into effective classroom practices,participating in regional
TYCA events, joining an NCTE committee, supporting non-tenure-track faculty
(Kezar and Maxey), or advocating in all the ways teachers of English are expected
to advocate,provide leadership,and guide college policy as part of our normal day-
to-day activities.One can also provide leadership at one’s faculty council or faculty
senate, as Holly Hassel suggests.This is a way to pursue “governance as activism”
and promote “better living through policy.” One can also encourage students to
contribute essays to The Community College Success Stories Project, a website
I established (with the help of a CCCC Research Initiative grant) to celebrate
community colleges.The site, which has just gone live, features essays written by
community college students about their journeys to and from open admissions
institutions (http://www.communitycollegesuccessstories.org).
Some individuals may wish to engage in other forms of activism that involve a
bit more risk (for perspective,seeTinberg,“Interview—Part I”and“Interview—Part
II”).These options include writing op ed essays and letters to the editor, joining
public protests,helping to shape the public narrative about community colleges and
higher education (Sullivan,“Shaping”;Tinberg,“2014”;Tinberg,Border),organizing
local activist committees or advocacy groups, running for elective office (as some
of my colleagues at MCC have done), serving on town committees, establishing
or contributing to an activist blog or website likeTeacher ScholarActivist (https://
teacher-scholar-activist.org/) or Everyday Advocacy (https://everydayadvocacy.
org/), consulting with legislators, joining activist groups like COCAL, the Coali-
tion of ContingentAcademic Labor (http://www.cocalinternational.org/),forming
local communities of practice (Toth and Sullivan), establishing partnerships with
local high school English teachers (Cecchini), forming allies and alliances across
institutional boundaries,and becoming a community organizer or coalition builder.
Having spoken with a number of individuals who founded my own com-
munity college in the early 1960s as part of the work I am doing on a research
project documenting the history of our institution, I came to understand that my
community college did not, of course, found itself. Like most open admissions
institutions around the country, my college was created by activists who worked
tirelessly over many years,overcoming many complex and difficult challenges.These
endeavors were driven by a deep commitment to community,higher education,and
14. S y m p o s i u m / A c a d e m i c F r e e d o m , L a b o r, a n d Te a c h i n g 351
social justice. For decades now, we have been enjoying the fruits of this important
work. But advances can always be reversed. Policies we believe to be “permanent”
can prove to be quite impermanent.And
especially during times of fiscal auster-
ity like today, what we take for granted
can be challenged with all manner of
ill-advised or expedient public policy.
In Connecticut,just in the last five years,
English teachers have had to respond to
state legislation that dramatically changed
the way we taught developmental educa-
tion (PublicAct 12-40,which was passed
in 2012 [Hassel et al.]), defend the idea
of open admissions (Sullivan, “Ideas”),
contend with increasingly dire budget
shortfalls,and battle against a recent radi-
cal reorganization proposal by our Board
of Regents called Students First, which
will strip the community colleges in the
system of our leadership—our presidents,
deans, and most of our administrative staff—and consolidate these functions at a
central office.This plan was approved by our Board of Regents just two weeks ago
(December 2017).
We can no longer enjoy the academic freedom of simply teaching our classes
and meeting with our students, benefiting from the work done by activists of past
generations.We are being called upon to defend this vitalAmerican institution and
the revolutionary freedoms it offers students to create better lives,better selves,and
better futures for themselves and their families.Only activism and engagement will
keep these freedoms alive. One celebrated local activist I talked with as part of my
research for this symposium said that all the work that she and her fellow activists
did in the 1960s and early 1970s “made it so the next generation didn’t have to
fight. Now, they don’t know how to fight.”
Let us understand that the times are calling us (austerity, extreme politi-
cal polarization, a deeply cynical post-truth culture) as perhaps never before. Let
us embrace the gift of this responsibility, and each do what we can to move this
important work forward.
Academic Freedom and the Idea of a Writing Program
Annie Del Principe and Jacqueline Brady
Sam (a pseudonym) is an experienced teacher at a community college where he
primarily teaches first-year composition courses—the bread and butter of the
English department. Devoted to his students, Sam takes great pride and responsi-
bility in the courses he teaches.A decade ago, the composition program, with the
We can no longer enjoy the
academic freedom of simply
teaching our classes and meeting
with our students, benefiting from
the work done by activists of
past generations.We are being
called upon to defend this vital
American institution and the
revolutionary freedoms it offers
students to create better lives,
better selves, and better futures
for themselves and their families.
15. 352 T E T Y C Vo l . 4 5 , N o . 4 , M a y 2 0 1 8
help of faculty on the department’s composition committee, established a flexible
shared curriculum structure for both of the required FYC courses. Five years ago,
the program further specified that the last major assignment of Comp 1 should
include a small amount of research. Initially, Sam revised his own syllabus to align
with these curricular requirements,experimenting with various ways of integrating
research into the final project for his course.After a couple of semesters, however,
Sam grew disappointed with what his students were producing, so made the in-
dependent decision to eliminate the required research component. He felt that he
had compromised the quality of his instruction in attempting to make space for
teaching research and that his students were simply not ready to do even a small
amount of it at the end of Comp 1.
We open with the hypothetical scenario of Sam in part because we rou-
tinely encounter versions of it in the writing program that we direct; but more
importantly and more broadly, Sam’s story highlights tensions in power relations
and raises several pressing questions regarding academic freedom that often exist
in writing programs at two-year colleges. In the limited space of this forum piece,
we examine some of the salient aspects of this situation in order to tease out rather
than resolve these important tensions.This is not an argument about how or why
to discipline or contain Sam.We discuss Sam’s situation in order to learn from it.
In her historical work on academic freedom,Ellen Schrecker points out that
the concept of academic freedom along with its core principle of the autonomy
of faculty was created partly to distinguish highly educated university instructors
from ordinary workers.Academic freedom arrived in historical conjunction with
the professionalization of professors, the development of the distinct disciplines,
and the rise of the notion of academic fields of expertise.To this day, the basic
belief that professors possess expertise in specific fields of knowledge underscores
their right to make decisions in and about their classrooms. Ideally, their exper-
tise protects faculty from negative appraisal and intervention by outsiders, such
as politicians and administrators, who do not know or understand their fields of
knowledge or how best to teach them. But this history of academic freedom also
has created a conundrum for faculty today because it situates all of us who labor in
the increasingly corporatized academy at a crossroads between experts and workers.
One direction from this intersection takes us down a (probably elitist) path where
academic training, educational credentials, and participation in our chosen field is
thought to matter.The other way points us toward a (probably more democratic)
route where we are all seen as workers with equally valuable ideas to contribute
and experiences from which to draw.
At the most general level,Sam points out the tension between the individual
and the collective. In this situation, the instructor’s freedom to make pedagogical
and curricular choices regarding the classroom stands in direct conflict with the
collective decision of the group of faculty administering the program and serving on
the committee. According to the AAUP,in multisection courses like Composition
1 and Composition 2, where many faculty teach the same course, the privilege of
academic freedom resides with the larger faculty collective such that“the decisions
16. S y m p o s i u m / A c a d e m i c F r e e d o m , L a b o r, a n d Te a c h i n g 353
of the group may prevail over the dissenting position of a particular individual.”
This is partly how first-year writing programs across the country justify a mandate
for a unified choice of course theme or text. But the AAUP also wisely cautions
“deliberations leading to such decisions ought to involve substantial reflection and
discussion by all those who teach the courses”(“AAUP Statement”).FormerAAUP
president Cary Nelson further warns that there are no clear guidelines about how
such collective deliberations or decision making should proceed (19). And Marc
Bousquet puts this warning yet another way when addressing the uneven power
relations existing in most TYC writing programs, which rely on the cheap and
insecure labor of adjuncts. He asks,“How does the WPA’s right to establish cur-
riculum and set policies square with the teachers’ right to ‘autonomy over their
work’? Who defines teaching that doesn’t ‘work out’? Why should it be the WPA
and not other teachers, as in other disciplines?”(“Composition” 515).This line of
questioning and Sam’s case compel us to closely consider what constitutes expertise
in a writing program.
This conundrum is further exacerbated in writing programs at two-year
colleges where instructors have a wide range of backgrounds—some primarily
scholarly but most primarily experiential—that qualify them to teach composition.
The issue is epistemological: how is knowledge made in composition? And how
do we think it should be made? The seemingly theoretical question of whether
Stephen M. North’s “lore,” or what we know by teaching in the classroom, is as
valuable and reliable as knowledge gained through research and scholarship be-
comes a practical dilemma in the TYC.
In most community college writing
programs, the clear labor and power
dynamics seen in R1 contexts staffed
by TA grad students are made murkier
by a teaching labor force that is mostly
not nationally credentialed but possesses
decades of experience teaching FYC.
Richard Fulkerson astutely cautions us
that relying on our personal classroom
experience as our primary source of
knowledge in composition puts us in the
poor position of not being able to tell
“good” lore from “bad” lore (48). If we
value time on the job as the main origin
of“expertise,”then we put our programs
in a position of extreme relativism where
all teachers should simply follow their sense of“what works for them.”In contrast,
if we value advanced degrees in comp/rhet and English education—and the related
participation in scholarship—as the source of expertise, we risk that our teaching
labor force will feel that their “autonomy, professionalism, and competence,” and
therefore their academic freedom, are threatened (Janangelo and Klausman 136).
So an urgent task facing writing
programs atTYCs is to determine
a way forward that reconciles
these two different approaches,
honoring both the practical
knowledge gleaned from teaching
and the breadth of knowledge
gained through formal education
and research.Academic freedom
in these settings relies upon what
we mean by, or want from, our
writing programs.
17. 354 T E T Y C Vo l . 4 5 , N o . 4 , M a y 2 0 1 8
So an urgent task facing writing programs at TYCs is to determine a
way forward that reconciles these two different approaches, honoring both the
practical knowledge gleaned from teaching and the breadth of knowledge gained
through formal education and research.Academic freedom in these settings relies
upon what we mean by, or want from, our writing programs.While it is true that
“there is no agreed-upon concept of ‘writing program’” (Schwalm), scholars offer
competing views regarding what they might look like. Some envision programs
that don’t necessitate a centralizing authority, like a WPA, and that rely instead
upon collaboration among the faculty who actually teach the courses, whether
or not they are credentialed in the field of comp/rhet (Bousquet,“Composition”;
Calhoon-Dillahunt). In contrast, others resist calling an aggregate of sections of
writing classes a “program” unless they all share a coherent curriculum, faculty
development, and meaningful program assessment and are led by some type of
authority figure (Klausman;White et al.).This latter vision strives toward profes-
sionalism and cohesiveness, which, again, are grounded in a particular construct of
expertise within our field. In this vein, Jeffrey Klausman asks us:“Can we say that a
person with a Master of Arts in Imaginative Literature and little graduate training
in composition, who is not current in the field and does not read the journals or
attend the conferences, who relies upon lore primarily in his or her teaching, is a
‘professional’in composition? It would be difficult to say so”(244).Clearly,how we
define writing program along with the terms professional and expertise has enormous
implications for academic freedom.
Let’s return to our opening anecdote about Sam. His academic freedom
to choose to disregard the collectively established curricular expectations in the
writing program within which he teaches raises the following pressing questions
that we think all writing faculty and writing programs should consider:
> What type of expertise does this program value and why?
> Does an individual’s type of expertise qualify him or her for greater or lesser
freedom to make independent decisions about his or her own teaching? To
what degree does an instructor’s rank and employment status impact his or
her sense of academic freedom within the classroom? And how are these two
variables, expertise and employment status, made visible in the program?
> If, in programs mainly composed of multisection courses, academic freedom
is largely a collective right, to what degree, and how, does the writing pro-
gram act as a collective?
> What forms of governance exist within the program, and what are the power
dynamics enacted by those forms?
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