UMass Faculty Votes No Confidence in President and Board Over Planned Shake-Up

The Boston Globe: UMass Amherst faculty votes no confidence in system president, trustees

Faculty and librarians at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst this afternoon cast a near-unanimous 214-1 no confidence vote in the board of trustees and system President Jack Wilson.

The faculty is outraged by a proposed overhaul of the school’s leadership that calls for their chancellor to retire in a year. They initially planned only to include the trustees in a “lack of confidence” vote, but added Wilson to the motion.

The trustees are under fire for not consulting the faculty on the leadership changes and for holding a secret meeting to discuss the proposal at a dinner at the UMass Club in Boston on May 3. Eleven voting members of the trustees – two more than the minimum number for a quorum – were present at the dinner, where they heard a presentation from Wilson and Chairman Stephen P. Tocco.

Ivy Tech Will Pay $191,000 to Former Administrator Who Was Passed Over in Presidential Search

The Chronicle: Ivy Tech Will Pay $191,000 to Former Administrator Who Was Passed Over in Presidential Search

The Ivy Tech Community College system has agreed to pay a year’s salary to a former executive vice president, Carol A. D’Amico, to avoid a possible lawsuit over her not being chosen as the system’s next president.

New TSU board meets as lawmakers debate its future

Houston Chronicle: New TSU board meets as lawmakers debate its future

Texas Southern University’s new governing board started the process of rebuilding the troubled school Tuesday while state lawmakers remained at odds over how to proceed.

University studies to resume Thursday as 41-day strike ends

Haaretz: University studies to resume Thursday as 41-day strike ends

University and college students will return to their studies Thursday ending a 41-day strike, one of the longest in the history of student protests in Israel.

Representatives of student organizations ended the strike after signing a controversial agreement with the government, which recognizes the students as a community whose consent the government should seek regarding tuition changes.

However, the agreement does not promise the students a veto over tuition hikes, and also requires that universities and colleges implement reforms outlined by the Shochat Committee before funds cut from their budgets are returned.

Another Cost for Students Accused of Internet Piracy: Fees to Reconnect to Campus Networks

The Chronicle: Another Cost for Students Accused of Internet Piracy: Fees to Reconnect to Campus Networks

Stanford University students who pirate copyrighted materials online may end up having to pay to reconnect to the campus computer network.

Univ. chair Kaveh says semester still valid after strike deal

Haaretz.com: Univ. chair Kaveh says semester still valid after strike deal

Professor Moshe Kaveh, chairman of the Committee of University Heads said Tuesday the current semester will not be cancelled, after the National Union of Israeli Students’ vote early Tuesday to end the student strike that lasted for 41 days and crippled the higher education system.

Iran Accuses American of Revolution Plot

The New York Times: Iran Accuses American of Revolution Plot

The Islamic Republic of Iran yesterday accused a prominent American academic it imprisoned two weeks ago of conspiring to foment a velvet revolution there.

Israeli Students End Strike as Government Compromises on Financial Issues

The Chronicle: Israeli Students End Strike as Government Compromises on Financial Issues

Israel’s 250,000 college students will resume classes on Thursday after a strike of more than five weeks that brought the country’s universities and colleges to a standstill. The students were protesting higher-education cuts and proposals to increase tuition fees.

The semester will be extended by two to four weeks, depending on the discipline, to allow students to catch up on lost class time.

Student leaders approved a compromise deal late on Monday night, by a vote of 23 to 17, ending a long and acrimonious dispute that had spilled over into violence as student protesters scuffled with the police in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.

Under the deal, the government agreed to restore over four years some $300-million that had been cut from the higher-education budget, freeze student fees for one year, and consult with students before carrying out recommendations of a government-appointed panel known as the Shochat Committee, which is to due to report next month on reforming how higher education is financed.

Student leaders oppose plans by the Shochat Committee, so named for the former finance minister who leads it, to raise fees and introduce a system of student loans. A previous committee and the Knesset, Israeli’s parliament, have both recommended reducing student fees.

Increase in Pay for CFO’s Outpaces That of Other Top College Officials, Chronicle Survey Finds

The Chronicle: PAY FOR CFO’S INCREASES RAPIDLY
Chief financial officers at the nation’s colleges have bigger workloads than ever before, and in return, many are taking home much larger paychecks.

Giving up the Grade

This article was printed in the spring 2007 issue of Our Schools / Our Selves and the CCPA Monitor, both published quarterly by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives

By: David F. Noble

Critical pedagogy has long condemned grading as an impediment to genuine education, but critical pedagogues continue to grade, as a presumed condition of employment. “I hate it but I have to do it” is their lame lament.

But they no longer have to do it. Throughout the thirty-odd years of my university teaching career I have always found ways around grading, primarily by giving all A’s, thereby eliminating grades de facto if not de jure. Last year for the first time, after long bemoaning my “anomalous” practice, York University officials formally prevailed upon me henceforth to designate my courses “ungraded” (a pass/fail option without the fail), thereby taking them off the radar and perhaps unintentionally establishing a promising academic precedent.
As a tenured full professor, of course, I do enjoy an unusual degree of job security, a privilege provided by a paying public in need of some truth and thus some unshackled, socially responsible scholars. Moreover, as a unionized employee I am protected by a collective agreement which requires only that I submit evaluations on time without specifying what they “should” be. Thus I am indeed in a good position to challenge the grading regime, but so too are many others who continue to grade.

Why? Typically, as already indicated, colleagues express a fear of administrative reprisal. But they embrace grades also for other, unspoken, reasons, perhaps unacknowledged even to themselves.

Grades offer teachers a convenient device for allaying their anxieties about their own abilities by shifting them onto their students, through an endless round of tests, examinations and evaluations. Grades get teachers off the hook; they preserve professorial authority and are indifferent to professorial incompetence. Bad faith protestations about administration requirements can mask the fact that grades serve the teacher at the expense of the students, and at the sacrifice of education.

But in all this the primary reason for the existence of grades—publicly-subsidized pre-employment screening—is rarely acknowledged. Grades appear to be a matter between teacher and student—until they are “submitted.” At that point those for whom grades are really given—those who have perhaps never even stepped into a classroom—gain access to the measurements of their prospective labour force. Here is the silent third party in the halls of academia, the so-called elephant in the room, to whom academia has too long been hostage. Eliminating grades eliminates the elephant from the room, emancipates academia and reintroduces education.

The elimination of grades at a stroke shifts academic attention from evaluation to education, where it belongs. When skeptical colleagues protest that it is not fair for me to give the same grade both to people who work hard and to people who fail even to show up, I remind them that these people are not getting the same reward because the people who work hard also get an education. “Oh, yeah,” they say, remembering as an afterthought what should be at the forefront of their profession.

Students themselves have collectively never resisted my refusal to grade them, and our experiences have been mutually rewarding beyond measure, and all measurement. With grades no longer a matter of concern, no time is ever wasted on discussions about evaluation—heretofore students’ primary preoccupation. Without having to fear or defer to professors or peers, students are freed for forthright and authentic engagement, an essential ingredient of genuine education, and discover that they are not alone, despite the rituals of competitive individualism enforced everywhere else around them.

With the substitution of encouragement for evaluation, intellectual excitement becomes the defining element in the educational ethos, replacing anxiety–which, as every parent knows, is lethal to learning. Abandoning grades annuls alienation: students no longer depend on others for a sense of their own worth.

Without grades, students do not have to try to read the professor’s mind—an impossible task anyway, so philosophers tell us—and can instead concentrate upon reading their own minds, self-knowledge being the grail of education. With grades gone, and having thus side-stepped the institutionally routinized regime of infantilization so corrosive of self-respect, self-confidence and self-worth, students can now begin to take themselves and their own thoughts seriously—for too many an altogether novel experience. This is the only true end of education.

The elimination of grades is no longer merely a theoretical proposition. It is an actuality, and a precedent, given my experience at York University. I now teach officially-designated “ungraded” courses with the formal sanction of the Office of the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and in full recognition of the Vice President/Academic. From this fertile ground, I advise my colleagues across the country: Try it; you are bound to like it. And so, I suspect, are your students, who will at last start receiving what they have been presumably been paying for and what we have been professing to provide.

Historian David F. Noble is a professor at York University in Toronto.

Africa’s Storied Colleges, Jammed and Crumbling

The New York Times: Africa’s Storied Colleges, Jammed and Crumbling

Thiany Dior usually rises before dawn, tiptoeing carefully among thin foam mats laid out on the floor as she leaves the cramped dormitory room she shares with half a dozen other women. It was built for two.

Ontario: Colleges should be treated as legitimate partner to universities, retiring Humber College president says

Globe and Mail: Colleges should be treated as legitimate partner to universities, retiring Humber College president says

Robert Gordon has spent a career overseeing a massive expansion of Toronto’s Humber College both in reputation and size. Now on the eve of his retirement, he says it’s time for an overhaul of Ontario’s college system in order to shake its second-class image and become part of the solution to the country’s growing demand for postsecondary education.

British Columbia: Colleges must return to vocational role, B.C. report says

Globe and Mail: Colleges must return to vocational role, B.C. report says

A sweeping review of B.C.’s postsecondary system is making waves with its proposal to re-establish clear distinctions between colleges and universities in an effort to focus resources and improve higher education.

California: Prisons’ budget to trump colleges’

San Francisco Chronicle: Prisons’ budget to trump colleges’: No other big state spends as much to incarcerate compared with higher education funding

Inmates sleep in three-high bunks in a gymnasium due to o… Spending gap between prisons and higher education narrows…

As the costs for fixing the state’s troubled corrections system rocket higher, California is headed for a dubious milestone — for the first time the state will spend more on incarcerating inmates than on educating students in its public universities.

Gender and Leadership

Inside Higher Ed: Gender and Leadership

In some ways, men who are community college administrators are becoming more like women. And in some ways, women in these positions are becoming more like men — in leadership styles and certain demographic trends.

Iran: A Scholar Detained

Inside Higher Ed: A Scholar Detained

When news broke that Iran had incarcerated Haleh Esfandiari in a notoriously brutal prison in northern Tehran on May 8, politicians, including the presidential hopefuls Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, spoke out for the Iranian-American scholar’s release. So did a coalition of faculty members, with a letter to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Piecework Professors

The Tyee: Piecework Professors

From The Ubyssey

If you’re a student with a summer job, you could earn more money in the next few months than those teaching your classes. And if you’ve ever made more than $11 dollars an hour, that puts you in a potentially higher pay-scale than about one-quarter of faculty at UBC, where a growing coterie of professionals — also known as “sessional instructors” or “contract staff” — are earning one-third less than starting high school teachers.

Grad School Survival Guide

The Tyee: Grad School Survival Guide

Grad school isn’t for everybody. In fact, it’s often pretty tough to tell whether or not you’ll benefit, in the long run, from hitting the books any more than you did for your undergrad.

Standing Up for Open Access

Inside Higher Ed: Standing Up for Open Access

After complaints from MIT faculty and others, engineers’ group rethinks policy that limits transmission of materials on an online database

Dishonesty theme runs beneath range of headlines in higher ed news

AP: Dishonesty theme runs beneath range of headlines in higher ed news

There were historic breakthroughs, such as the selection of Harvard’s first woman president, and there was tragedy — the horrific shooting spree at Virginia Tech.

But if the academic year now winding down had a theme, it was a more subtle one: dishonesty.

Consider:

— Nine MBA students at Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business faced expulsion, and 25 others lesser punishments, for their roles in an exam-cheating scandal — the most high-profile of several this year.

Nine students were dismissed and another 37 given lesser punishments for cheating on an exam at Indiana University’s dental school. At the U.S. Air Force Academy, 18 were expelled and 13 placed on probation. And Ohio University continued to deal with the fallout of a report that found “rampant and flagrant” plagiarism by graduate students in its mechanical engineering department.