Once I thought I had the fortitude to study and practice law, so I enrolled in a
contracts course. The course was fine but I don’t have what it takes to be an
attorney. I know this because I was married to one. We were together when she applied
to law school, was called to the bar, and then practiced as an associate for a
law firm. Where earning a living is concerned, I know the practice of law and the
practice of higher education.
You are invited to explore alternative public higher education models. The models I develop treat academics as professionals, not faculty employees. These models are original and do not rely on the increased use of technology, public funding, venture capitalism, bond sales...; while they offer the possibility of sustainable, quality, affordable, accessible, and equitable higher education service and stewardship. PSA Projects Initiative: https://busking4challenges.blog/
Thursday, February 6, 2025
Professionals for Hire, But Not for Higher Education
Monday, February 3, 2025
Presidents Are Essential, But Not to Higher Education
Thirteen years ago, I argued it is a red herring to spend resources and rancor on criticizing the compensation of presidents, deans, chancellors, and other offices of the institutions. The stink of bloated administration and compensation distracts from the scent of serious structural problems in the university and college model for higher education. A model we have inherited without challenge or alternative, in which these positions and people form clauses and parties to a social contract for the social good. In many minds, it would be hard to separate higher education from higher education institutions, though one is a means and the other an end.
Consequently, the scope of discussion on presidential compensation is not fundamental. In present circumstances the cost of the position is considered by some to be unacceptably high. This does not challenge the existence of the position, but assumes it and offers internal assessment of value, with claims of relative systemic inequity.
These questions are fundamental to higher education. Union bosses bitching about that compensation for that person as that president of that institution is fundamental only to universities and colleges and the academics who happen to be employed by them. Social goods and personal welfare are fundamental, tools for their provision and protection are not.
Tuesday, January 28, 2025
Mixing Collars, PSA Makes Light Blue Higher Education
This post explores earning as an academic and as a blue-collar worker, both of which I have done for extended periods of time and often with overlap. I make the case that the vocationalization of higher education – the notion that the pillar’s principal personal and public value is to help land a job that satisfies a return on investment – is forced on us by the institutional model that we have inherited without necessity or challenge. I disclaim our inheritance of university and college employers, and offer an alternative in the professional service and stewardship model for higher education.
Starting my second year of faculty employment with Saint Mary’s University, I received mail at my home from SMU informing me that I was placed on probation and no longer permitted to enter campus or use university facilities. The first claim was true, but in Canada campuses and facilities such as university libraries are open to the public and the institutional employer-enroller cannot deny me access merely because I managed to fail all courses in my first year of an undergraduate anthropology degree.
Sunday, January 12, 2025
25 Years Ago In the Academe: Same Shit Different Day
It’s worth reaching back to the start of this century, to an
exchange between two academics in Canada, to see how meaningful improvement is
not coming to higher education so long as the university and college model remains
unchallenged. I do not mean challenge to some peculiarity of its players, positions,
policies, procedures, processes, or practices, but a winner-takes-all
contest. At any rate, improvement is not coming from academics who fail to see beyond the campuses
they cling to for validation and vacation, memory and mortgage; beyond the
peaks and valleys of unionists, trustees, capitalists, and politicians that
interfere with proper stewardship of higher education.
This must stop. Not by getting your version of your institution in a secure enough position to act as some paradigm for generations to come. It’s by doing exactly the opposite. It’s by recognizing that Oxford, Stanford, Melbourne, McGill, Peking and the rest are the price of an inheritance. They are instruments in a service and stewardship model. They are not higher education. They are not the only means of providing the teaching, researching and community servicing of higher education. They are not many things that they need to be in fulfillment of their social contract, but principally, they are not required.
Saturday, December 7, 2024
Dear Donald, Wanna Re-Open Trump University for the Greater Good?
Dear Donald
Trump,
You opened a university and closed it with a court settlement. Without caring about fault, how'd you like to right that wrong and contribute much more to higher education besides?
Included in the case was a penalty of up to $1 million for operating an unlicensed university in the state of New York. I care about this misdemeanor offence which government assesses in its control of higher education. I think this crime should concern everyone. I think it directly concerns you, Donald.
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PSA Wants That Nasty Mess at the Bottom of the Cone
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