Welcome to The Valve
Login
Register
Valve Links
The Front Page
Statement of Purpose
Current Authors
John Holbo - Editor
Scott Eric Kaufman - Editor
Aaron Bady
Adam Roberts
Amardeep Singh
Andrew Seal
Bill Benzon
Daniel Green
Jonathan Goodwin
Joseph Kugelmass
Lawrence LaRiviere White
Marc Bousquet
Matt Greenfield
Miriam Burstein
Ray Davis
Rohan Maitzen
Sean McCann
Guest Authors
Past Authors
Laura Carroll
Mark Bauerlein
Miriam Jones
Most recent articles
The Valve - Closed For Renovation
Happy Trails to You
What’s an Encyclopedia These Days?
Encyclopedia Britannica to Shut Down Print Operations
Intimate Enemies: What’s Opera, Doc?
Alphonso Lingis talks of various things, cameras and photos among them
Feynmann, John von Neumann, and Mental Models
Support Michael Sporn’s Film about Edgar Allen Poe
Philosophy, Ontics or Toothpaste for the Mind
Nazi Rules for Regulating Funk ‘n Freedom
The Early History of Modern Computing: A Brief Chronology
Computing Encounters Being, an Addendum
On the Origin of Objects (towards a philosophy of computation)
Symposium on Graeber’s Debt
The Nightmare of Digital Film Preservation
Most recent comments
Richard Petti on Occupy Wall Street: America HAS a Ruling Class
Bill Benzon on Whatwhatwhatwhatwhatwhatwhat?
Nick J. on The Valve - Closed For Renovation
Bill Benzon on Encyclopedia Britannica to Shut Down Print Operations
Norma on Encyclopedia Britannica to Shut Down Print Operations
Bill Benzon on What’s an Object, Metaphysically Speaking?
john balwit on What’s an Object, Metaphysically Speaking?
William Ray on That Shakespeare Thing
Bill Benzon on That Shakespeare Thing
William Ray on That Shakespeare Thing
JoseAngel on That Shakespeare Thing
Bill Benzon on Objects and Graeber's Debt
Bill Benzon on A Dirty Dozen Sneaking up on the Apocalypse
JoseAngel on A Dirty Dozen Sneaking up on the Apocalypse
JoseAngel on Objects and Graeber's Debt
Archives
Syndication
Articles
RSS 1.0 | RSS 2.0 | Atom
Comments
RSS 1.0 | RSS 2.0 | Atom
Validation
XHTML | CSS
Credits
Powered by Expression Engine
Logo by John Holbo

This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons License.
Blogroll
2blowhards
About Last Night
Academic Splat
Acephalous
Amardeep Singh
Beatrice
Bemsha Swing
Bitch. Ph.D.
Blogenspiel
Blogging the Renaissance
Bookslut
Booksquare
Butterflies & Wheels
Cahiers de Corey
Category D
Charlotte Street
Cheeky Prof
Chekhov’s Mistress
Chrononautic Log
Cliopatria
Cogito, ergo Zoom
Collected Miscellany
Completely Futile
Confessions of an Idiosyncratic Mind
Conversational Reading
Critical Mass
Crooked Timber
Culture Cat
Culture Industry
CultureSpace
Early Modern Notes
Easily Distracted
fait accompi
Fernham
Ferule & Fescue
Ftrain
GalleyCat
Ghost in the Wire
Giornale Nuovo
God of the Machine
Golden Rule Jones
Grumpy Old Bookman
Ideas of Imperfection
Idiocentrism
Idiotprogrammer
if:book
In Favor of Thinking
In Medias Res
Inside Higher Ed
jane dark’s sugarhigh!
John & Belle Have A Blog
John Crowley
Jonathan Goodwin
Kathryn Cramer
Kitabkhana
Languagehat
Languor Management
Light Reading
Like Anna Karina’s Sweater
Lime Tree
Limited Inc.
Long Pauses
Long Story, Short Pier
Long Sunday
MadInkBeard
Making Light
Maud Newton
Michael Berube
Moo2
MoorishGirl
Motime Like the Present
Narrow Shore
Neil Gaiman
Old Hag
Open University
Pas au-delà
Philobiblion
Planned Obsolescence
Printculture
Pseudopodium
Quick Study
Rake’s Progress
Reader of depressing books
Reading Room
ReadySteadyBlog
Reassigned Time
Reeling and Writhing
Return of the Reluctant
S1ngularity::criticism
Say Something Wonderful
Scribblingwoman
Seventypes
Shaken & Stirred
Silliman’s Blog
Slaves of Academe
Sorrow at Sills Bend
Sounds & Fury
Splinters
Spurious
Stochastic Bookmark
Tenured Radical
the Diaries of Franz Kafka
The Elegant Variation
The Home and the World
The Intersection
The Litblog Co-Op
The Literary Saloon
The Literary Thug
The Little Professor
The Midnight Bell
The Mumpsimus
The Pinocchio Theory
The Reading Experience
The Salt-Box
The Weblog
This Public Address
This Space: The Fire’s Blog
Thoughts, Arguments & Rants
Tingle Alley
Uncomplicatedly
Unfogged
University Diaries
Unqualified Offerings
Waggish
What Now?
William Gibson
Wordherders
<< The Last Professors? | Front Page | Progress in Psychology and Psychiatry >>
Tuesday, April 08, 2008
Teach The University!
Posted by Marc Bousquet on 04/08/08 at 01:38 PM
crossposted from howtheuniversityworks.com
Next to healthcare, higher education may be the most significant public institution of the day.
My posting this week is inspired by the Rethinking the University: Labor, Knowledge, Value conference in Minneapolis April 11 to 13.
One of the sessions will feature Jeff Williams, Heather Steffen, David Cerniglia, and Eric Leuschner on the importance of engaging undergraduates in debates about the meaning, purpose, funding, and nature of higher education.
This is a persuasive position since undergraduates are the largest group of stakeholders in the institution, yet draw their information about it from a hodgepodge of under-informed and often mendacious sources.
I’m particularly interested in Steffen and Cerniglia’s paper, “Composing the University,” which reflects on their experience of teaching the university in a first-year writing course. Ultimately, they are making the arguments made by Jefferson and Dewey. “The university as a topic for composition courses makes sense for both their humanities gen ed content goals and their writing goals,” Steffen says:
Our ultimate objective in teaching the university and in thinking about its potential as a pedagogical move is to discover whether knowing more about the institution in which they spend four—or often more—years of their lives can help to make students more critical, active citizens of the university and, by extension, other communities in which they participate.
Steffen and Cerniglia are Jeff Williams’ research assistants for minnesota review, a widely-respected humanities journal that may soon discontinue publication due to the quality-management of Carnegie Mellon University. (By continually pressing for such “quality improvements” as asking one graduate student to do the work of two, or for the editor to edit without summer pay, etc.)
Williams’ own paper draws on his recent article for Pedagogy (Winter 2008), and makes a series of arguments against continuing the notion that the university is a transparent or neutral place from which to accomplish other things.
“Next to healthcare,” Williams says, higher education
“is the most significant public institution of our day that speaks to the distribution of resources and the welfare of citizens. Prompting students to reflect on how they are formed, where modern institutions come from and how they work, is, I should think, a primary pedagogical goal of higher education and especially of criticism.”
The Pedagogy article offers many suggestions for courses fulfilling this ideal—from a course in the academic novel, to a historical survey of the changing idea of the university, to courses treating “the student” as an anthropological sociological, or internationally comparative subject, or a course on particular themes relevant to student life—such as the growing problem of debt or the hyper-exploitation of the undergraduate as a source of cheap labor. More on the latter tomorrow with respect to my own contribution, Extreme Work-Study.
Add a comment: