Friday, July 13, 2007

Group Profile: Joseph Harris

[Scheduling note: This is the latest installation of a Friday series profiling Group of 88 members, building off earlier posts on Wahneema Lubiano, Grant Farred, Sally Deutsch, and Kathy Rudy. The posts examine the scholarship and teaching of Group members, trying to show the mindset of professors who last spring abandoned both the tenets of Duke’s Faculty Handbook and the academy’s traditional fidelity to due process. An item to keep in mind: in higher education, professors control new hires. So the people profiled in this series will craft future job descriptions for Duke professors; and then, for positions assigned to their departments, vote for new hires.]

Group of 88 signatory and “clarifying” faculty member Joseph Harris teaches English and directs the University Writing Program. He received his B.A. from Haverford and his Ph.D. (in English Education) from NYU.

Harris has published three books, each of which discuss how to teach writing. His courses have included “Framing the 2004 Election”; “Writing, Rhetoric, and Democracy”; “Writing and Social Change”; and “Writing and Social Class.”

Harris has an unusually direct impact on the average life of Duke undergraduates. All Duke students must take a first-year writing class—staffed by people that Harris, as UWP director, plays a large role in selecting.

Harris’ academic writings suggest a vision of the writing program that might not be what most Duke parents expect when they encounter the requirement in the first-year orientation packet.

Harris has explained that, as a writing program administrator, his job is to function as “an activist reformer in the university.” In a 1991 essay, he asserted that composition classes should “teach students to write as critics of their culture,” with “teaching itself as a form of cultural criticism, about classrooms that do not simply reproduce the values of our universities and cultures but that also work to resist and question them.”

It seems quite unlikely, however, that Harris wants his UWP teachers to design their courses to “resist and question” the “values of our universities” as reflected in the Group of 88’s statement. In another 1991 essay, he opposed using English classes as an opportunity to “pass down and preserve the legacy of high [W]estern culture.” Why? Because students “need to use language to question the demands their society makes upon them.”

In other words, students need to write as particular kinds of “critics of their culture.” Courses designed—say—to critique what some people would term the culture’s devaluing of life since Roe v. Wade don’t fit into Harris’ preference. Nor would he seem inclined to encourage criticism of a “culture” whose elites overwhelmingly endorse loosening the nation’s immigration laws or preserving “diversity” preferences in higher education.

[I write, in the interests of full disclosure, as a supporter of abortion rights, an opponent of a get-tough immigration policy, and a critic of the “diversity” agenda.]

“Identity,” Harris further asserted, “rises out of identification; we define who we are through who we choose to stand with and against.” When George W. Bush uses this kind of language, members of the Group of 88 have howled in protest.

In a 2002 article, Harris urged structuring writing classes so that students would “participate in the ongoing disputes and controversies of our culture.” Implementing this goal fairly, however, would seem to require a politically and ideologically balanced professoriate. Otherwise, Harris’ agenda amounts to little more than providing a rationale for an ideologically imbalanced faculty—like, say, Duke’s humanities faculty—offering students an array of courses from a one-sided political perspective.

Harris, effectively, has admitted as much. “One form of teaching in this public-ness in this adjectival sense,” he noted, “asks students to consider how their lives are connected to and shaped by social forces and events.” Writing courses could be oriented around service learning, where “students collaborate with local activists”—on a topic, of course, pre-selected by the professor. Or the classes could have students comment on current affairs—screened, again, by the teacher. Harris celebrated one Duke class where students were asked to write about campaign against sweatshops and whether the Chronicle should have rejected an ad opposing reparations for African-Americans—two issues of great concern to the academic far left.

Harris’ vision of the academy also falls well outside of the mainstream. In a 2000 article, he stated that professors “need to admit that we are indeed workers in a corporate system that we hope to reform.” (Not too many corporations give lifetime positions at six-figure salaries to people like Wahneema Lubiano, who received tenure after listing non-existent “forthcoming” books.) Too many academics, he complained, favor a meritocratic approach, concentrating on their own individual achievements rather than recognizing that they are “mid-level bureaucrats in large corporations.” Harris, for one, described himself as “from a union family and . . . troubled by my position as a manager in a system that treats so many of its teachers unfairly.”

Harris also has offered some unusual recommendations regarding grading policy. In a 2002 essay, he lamented “sense of loss that can haunt working-class youths when they find themselves newly schooled as part of the professional middle class.” Professors, he noted, need to adjust their grading policies, recognizing that they can’t “judge the work of minority and working-class students according to an abstract set of standards that fails to account for the ways the economic realities of their lives impinges on their careers as students.”

Beyond the point paternalistic assumption that all minorities are poor or working-class, it’s unclear how lowering standards helps anyone, including poor or working-class students. Indeed, we had this debate at CUNY, when disastrous policies along the lines recommended by Harris devalued a CUNY degree in the 1980s and early 1990s; the institution has revived only through the initiatives of Chancellor Matthew Goldstein, who has advocated raising standards across the board.

In April 2006, Benjamin Albers, Christina Beaule, Jessica Boa, Matt Brim, Jason Mahn, and Marcia Rego joined Harris in signing the Group of 88’s statement. Unlike Harris, none of these faculty enjoyed the protection of tenure, and therefore were vulnerable to the political whims of their superiors. Harris does not seem to have concerned himself with how a self-described “manager” signing onto a highly controversial statement might have pressured—even if unintentionally—his contingent subordinates to endorse the statement as well. By the time the “clarifying” ad appeared in January 2007, Boa had left Duke, but Albers, Brim, and Rego joined Harris and five other UWP faculty members (Erin Gayton, Erik Harms, Fred Klaits, Tamera Marko, Kristin Solli) in signing onto that anti-lacrosse statement.

What sorts of courses are taught by these Group of 88/clarifying faculty, people hired by a professor who argues that composition courses should be designed “to teach students to write as critics of their culture”? Below is a sample of classes taught by UWP faculty who signed anti-lacrosse petitions:

  • “URBANcultureSPACEtimePOWER” (all one word), which explores such questions as, “Why are there no supermarkets in some neighborhoods, only liquor-stores? . . . Who gets ‘a view’ and who is put under surveillance?”
  • “Cell Phones to Designer Babies,” which examines how “cell phones to cybersex to ‘designer babies’” to other technologies are “produced, marketed and consumed in terms of [naturally] race, class, gender, sexuality, labor, family and nationality.”
  • Queer Eye Culture,” in which, “Reading key texts of queer theory, we will evaluate just how transgressive and non-normative (i.e., queer) everyday America is becoming. Core issues will include the distinction between gay/lesbian and queer, how race impacts queer identity, the commodification of queerness, and the ways in which queerness complicates the idea of homophobia.”

Harris is an associate professor; from 2000-2005, he served on the Arts and Sciences Course Committee.

274 comments:

«Oldest   ‹Older   201 – 274 of 274
Anonymous said...

To: Anonymous Duke Prof at 2:28 PM: How common is it for Duke Profs to read this blog?

-- From: Not a Duke Prof

Anonymous said...

Well, isn't this interesting . . . the interference I mean.

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Anonymous said...

Iman--sounds like ironic humor to me. Gay people have a great sense of humor about themselves, for the most part. That's another reason why I hate these dreary, humorless victimization ideologies. You can either laugh at yourself, or hold hands in a corner and cry about how victimized you are. I'll take the humor.

What do you call a gay bar with no chairs?

A fruit stand. hee hee!!!

Gary Packwood said...

Anonymous 8:23 said...

...Most faculty I know don't care so much what is asserted as they care that it is well asserted and backed up with evidence.
...I've had students in classes who make comments that would appear to place them to the right of Dick Cheney. If they write essays well and present clear arguments in class discussion, they get good grades; their personal political opinions don't enter into it. I think this is true in most cases.
...I think many of you haven't any idea what you're talking about when it comes to university grading standards and just blather on.
::
I agree with you and the issue of action without EVIDENCE is why we are trying to understand the G88 to include Professor Harris.

Who knew that professors would turn on the own students without any evidence at all?

The G88 depend on all of you really good teachers to defend teaching and thus give them cover while they advance their own propaganda or function as 'activist reformer in the university.'

As Carolyn noted...how are the kids going to know what is happening to them?
::
GP

AMac said...

Anon Duke social sciences teacher 1:45pm/2:28pm --

Thanks for your response. Heartening to hear that D-i-W is being noticed at Duke; I hope and suspect that you aren't the only @duke.edu reader (or commenter).

Off the cuff, here's how I'd approach evaluating the UWP. Find a Duke-like school without a similar program, where faculty are concerned about writing standards. At both schools, offer a certain number of entering freshmen $25 to write a one-page essay on a selected subject.

At the start of the sophomore year, repeat the exercise with the same students. Now have all the essays graded, blind, by profs from each school (The AP exam folks have standardized this form of essay-grading).

If the second school is sufficiently similar to Duke, the difference in frosh-to-soph essay scores should be due to the UWP. Or, of course, to chance--one must "power" the study appropriately to account for that.

Shouldn't be that hard, or expensive, or time-consuming. And I'm sure that a social scientist could easily come up with a better-designed study.

Anonymous said...

To: Not a Duke Prof @ 2:35pm
From: Anon Duke Prof @ 2:28pm

If my department is any indication, I would say 1/3. It's just a guess though...

Anonymous said...

Esquire 2:08, now there's a class I would sign up for. No one is better suited to be the instructor than our humble narrator.

Anonymous said...

To Anon Duke Prof @ 2:28

Can the other 2/3 read?

wink!

AMac said...

Re: Communism

"The Long March Through The Institutions" is a phrase that usefully describes how the political theories of Antonio Gramsci (1891-1937) are being implemented. Gramsci is a key thinker of the Marxist Hard Left whose ideas should be broadly studied and appreciated.

"Gramsci and the U.S. Body Politic" by Alberto Luzárraga (2000) provides an excellent synopsis of Gramsci's philosophy, along with a capsule biography. Here is a collection of Gramscian essays, maintained by his modern-day disciples.

Some of Prof. Harris' writings excerpted in the body of this post appear to have Gramsci as their inspiration. I wonder whether Prof. Harris would view that assessment as an insult or a compliment.

Anonymous said...

"You confirm my prejudices about older whitish males... "

Thanks for the confirmation of your bigotry.

Ed

Anonymous said...

My son took a class over 10 years ago that was similar to "Household:Past and Present"

The instructor wanted it to be a "you're okay, I'm okay"

Since my son did not think all types of households are okay, he questioned why the conclusions were being mandated before any of the students had done any research. I don't know how the instructor phrased it, but bottom line was "all households" would be considered as equals. Crazy. Even a 17 or 18 year-old knows that it is not true-- before they even look at a single statistic.

Anonymous said...

"I don't know if it is the case with all professions, but what interests me with about many of the comments on this blog is that so many people--admittedly non-academics--think they know how to teach.

Is this the case with every profession?"

12:35: I can't speak for every profession, but as for my own (law), I'd have to say the answer is yes. Even though I spent 4 years in law school (J.D. and LL.M.), and am licensed (by examination) in multiple states, everybody I speak to seems to think they know more about the law than I do (mainly because they've watched t.v. shows such as "Law and Order").

There are a lot of people who think they know a lot more than they really do -- on a wide range of subjects.

Anonymous said...

Well 1:25, I see you weren't zapped. Funny.

1:27 - Just relax. It's okay to be a little irreverant once in a while.

Anonymous said...

Duke Social Sciences at 1:45:

What you hear is true; this is definitely not just a problem at Duke. At my university (public and not elite), students who don't place out are required to take two composition courses, the second of which is broadly discipline-focused (social sciences, humanities, business, etc.). Like those at 1:50's university, these classes are housed in the English Department and administered by a full-time director whose teaching and scholarship are in composition.

Because I have sometimes taught the advanced class for business students, I know that professors in the business-related disciplines often complain about the inadequate writing skills of many of the students we send on to them. And I am dismayed to see, at both the freshman and advanced levels, the fundamental weakness in students' writing skills both when they enter my classroom and often, sad to say, when they leave it.

I agree that the main (if not the only) focus of a composition program should be to teach students how to write (with the caveat that, for a lot of students, this requires also teaching them how to read and think critically). The question is, how?

From a distance, the Duke program (which I'm familiar with because both of my children have gone to Duke) looks terrific compared to ours: students have the option of choosing courses focused on a specific topic that potentially interests them, and the requirement of two additional writing-intensive classes allows them to further develop their skills within the context of a specific discipline. Both of my kids enjoyed their Writing 20 classes, but both were pretty good writers coming in; Writing 20 just helped them to refine their skills in academic research and writing. One just completed an economics class with a writing designation in which she learned a great deal about writing in that field.

But I gather that, from up close, this program is as problematic as the one at my school. Why is this? It may be, in part, because composition programs, and composition instructors, have defined their goals poorly or too broadly, as your post seems to imply. (I'm not sure I'm reading this correctly.)

But there are many other reasons as well, starting with what happens in students' lives before they get to college:

1) Their elementary and secondary education doesn't prepare them well for college writing. My kids (high school graduates in 2000 and 2004) went to highly rated suburban public schools with ample resources and active parent communities; one moved to private high school, while the other stayed in public school. In elementary school, they did a lot of writing, most of which was expressive and designed to encourage them to enjoy writing; while spelling, paragraph structure and basics of grammar were included in the curriculum, these seemed to be disconnected from the writing assignments, and they were not highly stressed for fear of making school seem "boring."

In high school, my daughter in private school received an excellent writing education; the one who chose public high school learned how to write AP essays effectively but wrote very few longer-form papers because the teachers didn't have time to read and grade them. I think it's safe to assume the situation in underfunded inner-city schools is a lot worse.

2) They don't read, except when they are required to (and many of them not then, either). The more well-written texts a student encounters, the more likely he or she is to recognize and practice effective writing. I gather from things that I have read (I'm definitely not an expert) that this is, at least in part, becoming a matter of hard wiring in the brain. Kids in our fast-paced electronic culture become very good at tasks that require "multi-tasking" and quick reflexes, but they don't develop as many neural pathways that support more traditional intellectual tasks like reading and writing long, complex essays.

When they get to college, well, there are other issues. I don't know how typical my experience is, but it's what I know. In a typical advanced composition class of 22 students, I will usually have six or seven transfer students (most from community college) who have had different instruction in basic composition than my other students, three or four ESL students who are US residents and speak English fairly fluently, but don't write nearly as well, and one or two foreign students who neither speak nor write fluently in English. Many of my students work part- or even full-time, and at least one each semester seems to run into conflicts between work schedules and class schedules.

Of the remaining students, some have fair to very good basic writing skills and are ready to explore the styles and conventions of business writing (in both academic and workplace contexts), while others struggle to put together a coherent sentence, believe that "everybody knows" (or, if it's a major research assignment, Wikipedia) offers legitimate support for an argument, or think that it's not really plagiarism if you cut and paste from a lot of different internet sources instead of just one. At least a few every semester make no bones about the fact that they are only present because the course is required and will do the minimum necessary to pass.

It's hard to know how to meet the needs of this range of students effectively in a three-credit-hour, one-semester class. Add on top of that the pressures on part-time instructors who are not making much money and may not be rehired if their student evaluations are consistently negative and you have a recipe for low standards and teaching that is only intermittently effective.

For me, teaching is a second career and not my main source of personal satisfaction or financial support; otherwise I'd be long gone. And I may be gone soon anyway if I can think of a better way to spend my time, as I feel increasingly frustrated and helpless. But I haven't quit trying to give my students something that will help them navigate their way through the rest of their college careers, if nothing else.

In my ideal world, all college-level writing instruction (except, perhaps, for students who need remedial assistance) would be in the disciplines. Isolating composition from substance inevitably relegates it to an inferior status in universities, which in turn inevitably leads to efforts by composition instructors (and the departments, whether English or otherwise, that staff the classes) to turn composition into a "legitimate" academic discipline by developing intellectual theories about it and/or expanding the scope of what it is supposed to accomplish, which in turn leads (probably also inevitably, although perhaps not) to a reduced focus on teaching students to write effectively.

But of course, it's not my ideal world, and students who come to college with a template for the five paragraph essay (thesis, three supporting points, conclusion) and at best a rudimentary understanding of grammar and sentence structure, much less rhetoric, can't be thrown directly into writing in the disciplines.

Sorry to have gone on so long, and not to have provided any very satisfactory answers. I realize it's not your field, but I'd be very interested to hear your ideas on what, specifically, your students' writing deficiencies are and how the UWP, or some alternative, might better fix them.

Anonymous said...

newly pseudo 3:56
A most excellent, well written post. It seems to me that students need to be strongly grounded in the fundamentals of grammar, nothing like traditional Latin to build vocabulary and understand sentence structure. I would add that broad reading including popular best-selling authors is essential for using words appropriately and in a fashion suitable to the times. I mean Shakespeare was the greatest writer ever, but no one can read him without a concordance. I recommend Patrick O'Brian (the Aubrey/Maturin novels), Thomas Harris (the Hannibal Lecter series) and of all people Stephen King. These guys can write. Unfortunately as you point out, we are becoming dinosaurs. There is a new form out there of communication, the internet, which is probably as important as the printing press. The fundamental question, then, is what is the goal of writing? Entertaining fiction, technical journals, legal or medical documents -- all have different forms, content, and conventions. What doesn't work is long words used almost correctly. What also is not acceptable is the use of writing classes to further a given agenda. When I am Dean of Confederate Studies, we plan to ask our students to write in the style of the South in the 1860's. Diversity? Inclusiveness? Certainly would be an eye-opener for a lot of folks.

Anonymous said...

The single best-written book I've ever read: Sherman: Fighting Phrophet, by Lloyd Lewis.

Also recommend The Story of Civilization series by Will Durant.

Best-written Civil War series: The Civil War by Shelby Foote.

Best-written poker books: Phil Gordon

Anonymous said...

make that Prophet

Anonymous said...

WOW... none of my children will go to ANY school with "teachers" (I will not call them "Professors") like that!
No lib agenda at duke, naw. It's everywhere, but this place is blatant... it's no wonder we have the Issues we do in our Country, people like nifong, "teachers" like harris... che guevera bas for sale, Flag burning kits... what in hell did I fight for? The left usually calls the right "sheep"... well, it appears they are the ones being molded, groomed, recruited... sheared.
This entire case is about so much more than nifongs incompetence, about his corruption... it is indicative of the downfall of society.

Anonymous said...

newly pseudo @ 3:56pm

Hi again from Duke Social Sciences @ 1:45.

No need to apologize. In fact, thanks for taking the time to write such a thoughtful answer.

As a user who has frequently asked himself this question, I have to say that many of my speculations about the causes of the UWP's failure are in line with what you suggest -- in particular the programs' efforts at justifying themselves academically by straying from their basic mission. This is a case in which I truly wished my speculations to be wrong.

If I can draw a brutal conclusion from your observations, I must say that the UWP is a waste of resources and should be eliminated.

Your remark that "In my ideal world, all college-level writing instruction (except, perhaps, for students who need remedial assistance) would be in the disciplines" is very telling. And to be honest in my experience the reality IS that students acquire these skills in the disciplines. It is not by chance, I submit, that the University has tightened the requirement that students take W-denominated courses and departments offer them. The puzzle is why such an (implicit) acknowledgement of the failure of the UWP cannot be followed up by the obvious conclusion: shut it down and put the resources to better use. The cost of shifting the burden of teaching writing skills on professors who teach upper-level electives is substantial. As you know through your daughter's experience, a W denomination means that the term paper goes through at least 2 rounds of revisions before being submitted in its final form for grading. I won't elaborate here on how this restricts what other ends the course may hope to achieve.

To your points concerning foreign students, I would add that in many graduate programs the majority of foreign students are taught how to speak and write clearly and effectively in english as part of the training and socialization in their chosen field.

If it can be done with foreigners in their mid-twenties as part of the process of teaching the discipline, why is it so hard for writing programs to do it with native speakers when it is the only objective of their courses?

I fear that the answer IS that these programs have given themselves different objectives from the one we think they have. If this is correct, then Prof. Johnson's post does indeed shed light on what these different objectives might be.

A final thing, if I may. You say: "One just completed an economics class with a writing designation in which she learned a great deal about writing in that field." What class was this? Given your expertise, this sounds like a valuable endorsment and I might learn something by checking it out. Thanks again for your time.

Anonymous said...

"In my ideal world, all college-level writing instruction (except, perhaps, for students who need remedial assistance) would be in the disciplines....

But of course, it's not my ideal world, and students who come to college with a template for the five paragraph essay (thesis, three supporting points, conclusion) and at best a rudimentary understanding of grammar and sentence structure, much less rhetoric, can't be thrown directly into writing in the disciplines. "

The five paragraph essay, grammer, sentence structure and rhetoric are basics required in all fields of human endeavor. They should be a general requirement for all students.

Anything beyond that becomes very domain-specific and should be taught within the disciplines.

I don't think it's necessary give the composition program its own individualized explanation of why it engages in political indoctrination rather than its supposed real job, given that so many other programs and departments do the same.

Anonymous said...

I think that there is a difference in criticizing someone who feels they know what a good teacher is, than telling a lawyer what the law is.
Parents are the first teachers. In my hometown, there are many parents that are homeschooling. Two of my neighbor's kids started their freshman year at 15. We had another homeschooler that was accepted to all 4 military academies. If you watch the National Spelling Bee, a large number of the finalist shown on TV are homeschoolers.

It's okay for me to hear from parents and grandparents. The conversation is good. I taught at a college that had a lot of Asian students. It was very difficult for some of them to be in a classroom where there was a lot of interaction. Their parents would come to me in disbelief that I did not lecture for the whole class period. they thought that was a terrible way to teach. It took many conversations--not sure I convinced some of them.

I should have told you that I just retired. I taught at a small state college, and we had similar problems like Duke's. I can accept that someone who has gone to college has a basis with which to make criticisms.

I'm not a chef, but I sure can make suggestions on how to improve a restaurant dish; I'm not an actress, but I can make suggestions how a play might have been improved; I do not know anything about industrial housekeeping, but I've made suggestions at my old campus on how staff could make make improvements; I've never been a President, but I sure could make suggestions to GW on how to improve his tenure at the White House.

If students aren't learning and can't write and employers are complaining (Like Derek Bok suggests in his last book--he was not just talking about Harvard), then maybe teachers are not doing a good job of self-regulating. Some suggestions may not be valid, but as teachers we know that only a fool keeps doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.

Mr. Harris needs to change the way they've been teaching for the last 15-20 years. Take some of the suggestions that parents and other professors are demanding. It's not about YOU.

AMac said...

Newly Pseudo, Duke SocSci, and Anon Teacher(s) --

Thanks for offering your varied perspectives on teaching first-year composition. And for structuring your thoughts as organized, coherent, readable essays (that seems somehow relevant).

You have expressed concerns that an independent, focused Writing Program (such as the one at Duke that Prof. Harris heads) might not be effective in improving students' ability to express themselves on paper.

Some of your comments brought Public Choice Theory to mind. This discipline investigates why the actions of 'civil servants' (writing instructors, in this case) often differ from what 'citizens' (here, faculty and students) want them to be. The explanation is that 'civil servants' have their own interests and agenda. Many systems are vulnerable to being gradually redirected from their orignal 'noble' missions to more parochial ones.

If this is indeed a problem with Duke's UWP, it would be sensible to reassign the task of raising writing skills to the departments most affected.

In any case, it surprises me that an initiative as large as the UWP (see 11:59am comment) seems to have avoided being subjected to objective measures of its performance.

Anonymous said...

I read a guest column in the WSJ about 15 years ago -- let's call it 1992, as dates are important in telling this. The column was written by a college professor.

He wrote that his office was recently changed and, as a dreaded consequence, he was forced to unload and sort through boxes of his old classroom materials. He came upon a sylabus for a graduate psychology course from 15 years earlier (1977ish). Looking at the assigned materials, and he mused at how "dumbed-down" the field had become -- he would never assign such difficult works to his graduate students nowadays.

He was finished with the sylabus and about to put it away when something at the top of the page caught his eye. This wasn't a sylabus for a graduate level class -- it was for an undergraduate class!

Anonymous said...

How many of the group of 88 are still at duke? I would think 50 % would be gone by now.

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Anonymous said...

anon @ 5:10pm

Good post.

To the poster who wrote: "I don't know if it is the case with all professions, but what interests me with about many of the comments on this blog is that so many people--admittedly non-academics--think they know how to teach. Is this the case with every profession?"

I find amusing that someone would even think that ordinary folks cannot comment about teaching because they lack... expertise!

Am I to think that you truly believe that the people who post on this board did not go to school?!?

Please quit deluding yourself that you are smarter and better educated than the rest of us and get in your head that school is about the students, not you. Which menas that they and their parents have every right and duty to question teachers.

I also find amusing that professors who feel free to comment on anything and everything, leveraging their credentials way outside their field, all of a sudden develop a deep respect for specialization and expertise. Who do you think you are fooling?

If you truly believe in what you imply, then you should applaud Prof. Johnson for taking them to task. If they had stuck to their expertise they would not have rushed to judge a legal case about which they knew nothing and understood nothing and would have let the professionals do their job in peace.

Anonymous said...

4:15 A very interesting post inre; 1860's writing. I've read several, nearly one hundred or so, letters from soldiers (some family)that have an artistic flow to them - quite beautiful. They are remarkable given that the authors are typically between engagements, lonesome, lack information, and generally filling time. Reading these letters made me understand that disrupting the supply lines and delivery of those letters probably created more chaos than the loss of military assets.

Anonymous said...

Duke Social Sciences--
The class was Econ165, American International Economic Policy, taught by Prof. Leachman. She provided detailed guidelines for what economics papers should contain and how they should be structured, and each paper (two shorter ones and a longer one at the end of the semester) received two grades: one for the substance and one for the writing. The substantive content of the class did not suffer, because two graduate students--one in economics and one in English--did the initial grading, which the Prof. then reviewed. My daughter got helpful comments on each paper and had the opportunity to meet with the grad students and the professor to discuss both her completed writing and her work in progress.

Allocating two grad student TAs to a single class of 60 students is, of course, a resource-intensive proposition, which tends to support your point about the expense of teaching writing in the disciplines.

As for foreign students, one of my frustrations is that, at my university, there is a version of first-year composition that is designed especially for ESL students--but students choose whether to take that version of the class, and many don't because it is an extra credit hour. When I get students who look like they will struggle in the regular version of the class, I encourage them to switch--but by then, often the ESL sections are full.

Anonymous said...

newly pseudo @ 6:13

One of my true regrets about my Duke education is that I never really utilized the personal attention that professors offered. That is a sincere statement.

But, on the other hand, what I did learn was how to teach myself.

Reading and learning an entire semester of upper level math in 3 days prior to a final exam, I was able to bring my C mid-term exam grade and F in class participation (rarely went to class) up to a B for the semester.

Thats what I really liked about math. Totally objective.

And just like the soft sciences and humanities. You can bet your bottom dollar that AA studies are objective (the pressure of my tongue on the inner walls of my cheek is truly intense in its pain).

Thank God I didn't take the 88's courses. Damn, I might now be flipping burgers a mickey D's.

Anonymous said...

inman said at 6:42 PM...

Reading and learning an entire semester of upper level math in 3 days prior to a final exam, I was able to bring my C mid-term exam grade and F in class participation (rarely went to class) up to a B for the semester.

I hope you learned not to buy the books. I used to go to the University Co-op a few days before the final and, standing in the aisles, read the book(s) that I was supposed to have bought at the beginning of the semester.

Anonymous said...

Inman,

You didn't learn an entre semester's worth of upper-level math in 3 days, now did you?

You certainly would not have been studying Euler.

Do you post these things to attract cybersluts like Debbie?

And this "flipping burgers at mickey D's"--you must know that the panache of such a noble gesture must be driving Debbie twisted with lust.

Admit it. You learned long division in 3 days. Not baaad!

Anonymous said...

"It is distressing to see just how evil the legacy of Stanley Fish really is.."

As bad as Fish was, intellectually frivolous re-education camp at Duke is part of a national trend, and not just the legacy of Fish.

Anonymous said...

anonymous@5:43 I do not find the comments from the professor in the WSJ article hard to believe in the least. I graduated from a small college in NY in 1975 that was then an all male institution. Its curriculum was the classical style of education. I received a heavy emphasis in math and science but an equally rigorous dose of history, english composition and literature, economics and philosophy. I entered a master's program in physical education at the University of Northern Colorado in 1997. I have never been more thoroughly under challenged academically in my life. I can safely say that my easiest undergraduate course in the early 1970s was ten times more challenging than my hardest graduate course at Northern Colorado.

mac said...

Great day of posting!
I'll say this about my own undergraduate education: my professors and instructors were (mostly) professional, hard-working, caring individuals.
I went to a small school (2,400 students at the time) and I was lazy, arrogant and obnoxious.
(nothing's changed?) It took me a long time to appreciate what they'd done for us - (for me, too.)

My professors tolerated a lot of ideas, but usually dismissed the weaker, poorly presented ones, as they should have; they were not burnouts - and what the Duke 88 appears to consist of are burnouts, and as someone suggested, possessing characteristics of NPD.

The professors at Duke who aren't possessed of the same qualities as the 88 must be hanging their heads. Not only do the students not deserve the 88: the professors who have their students' best interests at heart don't deserve to be associated with such a worthless lot.

Interesting posts today (hard to keep up, actually,) and a welcome break from the low-brow worlds of inept, corrupt DAs and their henchmen and silly SANEs.

Thanks for the education and entertainment - and the change-of-pace!

mac said...

I am left wondering why no one has spoken out for the literary genius of "Jonathan Livingston Seagull" or "Doc Savage: The Golden Peril."

Anonymous said...

Re: "One of my true regrets about my Duke education is that I never really utilized the personal attention that professors offered."

That is (was?) one of the really great things @Duke. When I was there, 18yr olds could buy beer. One of my philosophy profs (who held doctorates in both philosophy and physics) would hold informal office hrs at the CI. Its amazing how much one really learns when discussing ethics, epistemology, quantum mechanics, and theology in an informal environment over a few cold ones. The give and take was amazing.

Now, unfortunately, the face of Duke academia is being set by a few of the Group-of-88 who only seem capable of regurgitating PC dogma in obscure journals using tortured prose.

Anonymous said...

KC et al., I haven't had the time to read the comments to this thread (237 so far, so it's obviously a hot one) but I was thinking after I read the Rudy article that you should call this series "Point and Laugh." However, after reading this one I've changed my mind and think you should call this series "Point and Gasp." When one realizes that these people are teaching our youth, it's enough to make a person need to sit down and take many deep, slow breaths.

Where the hell are the Duke BOT members, and what the hell are they thinking letting these nuts be employed there?

Anonymous said...

anon @ 7:26

Yes...I most surely learned an entire semester of upper level math in 3 days.

I also skipped an entire semester of statistics (I got the syllabus on day one, went to the mid-term and final) and although my class participation was -- well, ZERO --- got a B.

I also took 6 weeks off in my junior year -- spring semester. At that point, the Dean of the College came to my room to find out where I was. I was sitting in the middle of the room, smoking a joint and playing my guitar. He looked at me, the guitar and the many pencil drawings hanging on my wall -- drawings such as "study of a hand while really stoned" -- and he decided that I was not wasting my time. I was intellectually active, but just not in a conventional sense.

I also graduated in three years -- cum laude.

Anonymous said...
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Anonymous said...

And to think my son wanted to attend Duke. I've disabused him of the notion that he'll be doing so on my $200k (over four years). If I'm going to spend that kind of money, it will be on a school with a rigorous curriculum, not one filled with cultural dilettantes whose sesquipedalian contrivances regularly descend into the ridiculous.

Anonymous said...

Polanski,

It was in the math department and taught by a tenured, full professor. It was advanced calculus.

I'm kinda like Dustin Hoffman in "Rain Man"....I can count toothpicks on the floor.

Further, I later taught myself differential equations, partial diffential equations, stochasctic calculus (including Ito) and the mathematics of Brownian motion.

Further, I have postulated the notion of multi-dimensional Markov processes that when analyzed, yield a result that statistically is similar to a random walk, but which incorporates the notion of memory.

Want more?

Anonymous said...

10:14

I really love my alma mater...I jsut have issues with its current administration and strategy.

My 19 year old son chose Lafayette.

Take a look.

Anonymous said...

Polanski,

I expected a reply.

Tom

Anonymous said...

Mac, I like how you think, ditto your post of 8:02. We were thrilled when both of our sons chose small, very academically challenging liberal arts schools where the teachers actually know who they are.
Inman, you won't be disappointed with your son's experience at Lafayette, we know many fine students and alums who went there for a fabulous experience.
There is life after Duke which is why I'm sending good thoughts to Collin and Reade. The status quo at Duke doesn't matter anymore.

Anonymous said...
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M. Simon said...

Harris also has offered some unusual recommendations regarding grading policy. In a 2002 essay, he lamented “sense of loss that can haunt working-class youths when they find themselves newly schooled as part of the professional middle class.” Professors, he noted, need to adjust their grading policies, recognizing that they can’t “judge the work of minority and working-class students according to an abstract set of standards that fails to account for the ways the economic realities of their lives impinges on their careers as students.”

If he wants to help minority students grade inflation is will be of no use to them except in landing their first job.

Real help would mean making sure they learn the material.

Which just goes to show how far off track this Prof. is.

He has no interest in doing the actual work. Easier to inflate a grade. Corrupt to the core.

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Anonymous said...

If I had the good fortune to once again learn in the academy, you're darn tootin....I'd very quickly seek out the best professors...and frankly, it would be discipline independent...I would search for the best minds. There was a wonderful book written years ago...I think it was entitled "The Ascent of Man" ... by Jacob Brownowski ... I may be totally wrong on the title and the author...

But I remember the theme of the book. It analyzed human thought from the moment that one could arguably call thought "human" to the present. It was about thought and knowledge and the progression of civilization. It was a remarkable work.

I consider myself a visual mathmetician, but also a student of human achievement over the eons.

Sorry, ... I haven't found a place for queer theory in my studies.

Anonymous said...

This is an exquisite post:

Public humiliation is a good thing when the object of that humiliation fails to know shame. We simply fill the void.

Nor do I feel very sorry for Professor Harris, who thought nothing about signing a condemnation of an entire body of individuals when he signed the infamous "listening statement." Think of it as humiliation being met with counter-humiliation.

Or, better yet, think of this blog as a "listening statement" that defines what a "social disastor" looks like. Or perhaps the Group of 88 fails to understand that they are part of an evolving social disastor in and of themselves?

Maybe you can all actually learn something (but I doubt it).

-Esquire-
-Maryland-



Debrah

Anonymous said...

Polanski,

My son is contemplating the study of philosophy. Also, he is a gifted athlete -- plays lacrosse and as a freshman played in every game.

I have always considered myself quite indifferent to racial sterotypes. I regret to say, however, and in all candor, I told him to not have any private relationship with a Black woman. Why take the chance? CMG and Nifong have both informed me of a malicious undercurrent in our culture.

Anonymous said...
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M. Simon said...

No justice, no peace said...

10:13 inre: communism promoting literacy...

Certainly not in the Duke humanities Dept., that's for certain.

By the way executing those that may be illiterate is hardly promoting literacy. Neither is starving them to death.

Jul 13, 2007 10:32:00 AM


Actually Communism tends to go after intellectuals first. Most of them go along to get along. However, it only takes a few disruptive ones with writing or rhetorical skills.

Anonymous said...

Inman:

I second anon@11:14. I married a black woman (I'm white). We have three beautiful children. She's the best thing that ever happened to me.

She despises CGM, Nifong, the 88...

You cannot mention Jackson and Sharpton without causing her irritation and embarassment. The reason? She is highly educated and she worked hard for everything she has. She wants our children to think of themselves as individuals. She believes in MLK's dream: judge me by the content of my character, not the color of my skin.

In my life I have had the privilege of meeting scores of black women -- and men -- who think like her.

Advising your son to stay away from black women just because they are black does not fit in the system of values that you seem to have strived to teach him. Better tell him to always exercise care and get to know people well so that he can judge them as individuals and by the content of their character.

Anonymous said...

If a college student has any sense and brains, they will end up learning to communicate via the written word or they will fail in life. I endured the Duke writing program and then endured combat missions over North Vietnam and Laos and I will tell you that some lessons are more poignant than others. I ended up learning to write because I had to learn to write or fail in business. My university teachers didn't help and wouldn't have a clue how to communicate and survive in the real world. I wouldn't want to go into combat with any of the "88" as their stage is a comedy of fools with no downside and nothing at risk.

Anonymous said...
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Anonymous said...

I once talked to a free-lance writer who put two kids through college on his writing. Took six twelve-hour days ffity weeks a year.
What did he write about? Anything he could think of or an editor asked for.
Point is, you don't need a contentious issue to learn or teach writing. Indeed, the contention can get in the way.
A good writer can write about anything--if he does his homework, of course--and Harris' rationalization is pretty obvious. This is a vehicle for indoctrination.

BTW, I am a great fan of Patrick O'Brian.

Anonymous said...

Mr. Poignant Inman @ 9:52:

Sounds like my college experience except for the being smart part. I also decided not to go to a "mathematics" class, other than the mid-term and final. The professor gave me a well-earned "F."

Thinking that this could not possibly happen again, I retook that Statistics 101 course, but with a different professor, and I was right! She gave me a "D."
__________

Looking back, I don't regret the beers or the girls. I do regret that I did not share my professors' keen interest in knowledge.
___________

Debrah & Esquire: Would it refine your fine point to suggest that K.C. Johnson's Blog is the real "Clarifying Statement." Just sticking my nose in where it is probably not wanted ....
____________

George Washington refused to declare himself King or even run for a third term because, standing behind him, K.C. Johnson held a long knife. "The Birth of Democracy," at p. 153 The New Yorker (Sept. 1955). MOO! Gregory

Anonymous said...

Tom Inman inre: "Further, I have postulated the notion of multi-dimensional Markov processes that when analyzed, yield a result that statistically is similar to a random walk, but which incorporates the notion of memory."

I'm curious what you think of Nassim Nicholas Taleb's Black Swan idea. Markov processes are beyond me, but I intuitively understand the notion of the unexpected.

mac said...

NJNP,
If you want sheer brilliance, look at Grant Farred's postulation of
the vernacular intellectual.

That is, brilliance is in the eye of the beholder.

That is, self-assessed brilliance, in the absence of actual evidence.

That is, Narcissistic Personality Disorder?

Anonymous said...

inman said...

Polanski,

It was in the math department and taught by a tenured, full professor. It was advanced calculus.

I'm kinda like Dustin Hoffman in "Rain Man"....I can count toothpicks on the floor.

Further, I later taught myself differential equations, partial diffential equations, stochasctic calculus (including Ito) and the mathematics of Brownian motion.

Further, I have postulated the notion of multi-dimensional Markov processes that when analyzed, yield a result that statistically is similar to a random walk, but which incorporates the notion of memory.

Want more?

Jul 13, 2007 10:18:00 PM



I'm like the waitress in "Rainman" ... I can tell you there are four toothpicks left in the box.

Anonymous said...
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Anonymous said...

The indoctrination of America's youth begins in kindergarten.

Why are we so shocked by what our children are being taught in college? College is just the finishing touch to 13 years of liberal education.

Apparently, some liberals (Hillary Clinton) think 13 years is not enough time to master thought conrol, they would prefer that our children begin their education while they're still in diapers.

"Those who have the youth on their side control the future." (Hans Schemm, leader of Hitler's Nazi Teacher's League)

Anonymous said...

(10:18pm)
If Debrah doesn't think you're sexy after that, I sure do!

Anonymous said...

11:43

Debrah now refers to herself as Debi (1 b, no e--she still considers herself a "deb"-utante).

I think she may be the madam that sent over Crystal and Kim (not that there's anything wrong with that).

Geoffrey Chaucer

Anonymous said...

Sorry Chaucer. That's a troll who's posting "Debbie" to which Debrah objects.
Read and understand before posting. :))

Anonymous said...

11:09

There's a serious empirical problem with your analysis: How do you explain the prevalence of non-liberals--eg, radicals, conservatives, neocons, libertarians?

Think about it.

Polanski

Anonymous said...

no justice no peace @ 2:03

Haven't read the book. In fact, I no longer read books. I'm afraid I might learn smething.

But the Cliff Notes were pretty good.

Sounds like he is concerned with things such as Gamma ray bursts...highly improbable and no way to predict sice they travel at the speed of light...but if one hit the earth, the earth would be a solar crouton...

...but alas, no salad.

Anonymous said...

Polanski
The fact that SOME non-liberals emerge from educational brain washing doesn't mean that the system is not designed to indoctrinate. It does mean that it fails to be successful 100% of the time.

Anonymous said...
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Anonymous said...

I would have to disagree and agree at the same time, the problem is two-fold, public funded brainwashing.

AMac said...

A follow-up to a point raised by Harris defender Anon 10:34am (7/13/07). My question to him or her at 10:56am (7/13/07) has gone unanswered:

----------

AMac said...

Anon 10:34am responded to my 10:27am note --

> Maybe [Prof. Harris] has apologized--privately, to the people who were concerned.

Yeah, maybe he has. By the way, how many people are on that "concerned" list? Three, or 47, or more?


----------

Today's "Sunday Notes" post cites an interview of Lax Coach Mike Pressler. His closing remarks:

"I have a great affection for a lot of people at Duke," Pressler says. "Am I a fan? Absolutely not. I'm a fan of the players and of some of the coaches, but you can't do this to people and get away with it and not apologize for it. Nobody has gotten an apology from anybody. That to me is an amazing thing."

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