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  • Error and Failure

    By Dean Dad February 18, 2009 9:33 pm

    Yesterday's IHE has a worthwhile story about 'reverse transfers' – students starting at four-year colleges and then transferring to cc's – becoming more common as students become more price-conscious. There's nothing terribly shocking in it, if you assume that recessions bring increased price awareness, even though it's a nice reminder that the traffic goes both ways.

    What got my attention, though, was the first comment after the story. 'Judith' wrote:

    My daughter finished her freshman year at Smith with a B- average and, upon being told not to bother to major in math, took time off to do remedial math work at a community college, intending to return to Smith. One day she said to me, "I'm not going back to Smith. They think that if I'm not already good at something, I shouldn't bother to learn it. At community college, the teacher tells us how we will use what we're studying in the future." She got an AS with honors and is now back in a four-year school (not Smith).Community colleges teach.

    It's a simple point, but it brought back a flood of memories.

    Back in my own student days, I remember getting a very clear sense in both high school and college – hell, even through grad school – that I was constantly being monitored for flaws. (This may be at the root of why so many of my cohort thought that Foucault was really onto something with the 'panopticon' idea. 'Omnipresent and internalized surveillance' described our felt reality pretty well.) The whole prestige hierarchy/pyramid model – basically an inverted funnel – is based on weeding people out. If you buy into the model early and set a goal of succeeding within it, the entire educational process becomes a game of failure avoidance.

    At some level, though, failure avoidance is a horrible way to learn (not to mention a horrible way to live). It rewards the wrong traits, and inhibits some pretty important ones.

    At Snooty Liberal Arts College, I remember professors constantly being frustrated as their attempts to generate class discussion fell flat. They never seemed to clue in that, having bought entirely into the failure avoidance model, we were all petrified of looking stupid. Annoyingly, in any given class there were usually enough ridiculously-gifted people that if you weren't among them, nearly anything you did offer would immediately become grist for the mill. The fear wasn't irrational; when you were being graded against the preternaturally gifted, showing weakness was just too risky.

    Grad school was even worse. At that level, a self-selected bunch of failure avoiders competed for faculty approval in a pretty airless environment for years. By the end, it took an act of will just to put together a declarative sentence. The most damning insult in grad school was "naive," which was typically applied to anyone who actually made some sort of positive claim. ("Naive realism" was the worst, since it implied the unforgivable sin of claiming to actually know something about something.) Self-doubt can be taught.

    In grad school, too, I recall the faculty being perplexed as to why so many doctoral students seemed oddly hesitant and overly deferential during oral exams. At one panel of grad student papers, I recall noticing that every single grad student started her presentation with "this is a work in progress." Translated, that means "please don't attack me." These habits are learned. Even now, I write with far too many parentheses, which is a form of defensive self-interruption. Old habits are hard to break.

    When I landed a full-time teaching gig at Proprietary U, I was immediately struck by the different way I was treated. Instead of being the object of study, constantly under scrutiny and with the burden of proving myself against unspecified and arbitrary criteria, I was suddenly assumed to be knowledgeable about my particular subject area. As the only member of the faculty in my discipline, I was suddenly the go-to guy for issues in my discipline. It took a couple of years to get past both the thrill of unaccustomed respect and the nagging sense of being an impostor. Some people never manage to integrate the two experiences, instead switching between self-abasement and self-aggrandizement in a sort of acquired narcissism.

    At the end of the process, you wind up with a greater-than-average proportion of hyper-critical shrinking violets who consider any attempt to deal with the realities of the outside world to be, well, naïve.

    The application of this model to the typical college Senate meeting, I'll leave to the reader.

    The model of teaching at the cc, and even at Proprietary U for that matter, is entirely different. It's not about poking and prodding the students until the flaws show up, the better to exclude them from the next level up. It's based instead on the assumption that most people can handle most subjects, if the classes are structured right and the students put in the effort. Success isn't assumed to be finite. It's assumed to be there for the taking, and the goal of the institution is to help the students take it.

    Underlying that model is an assumption that students are worthy of respect, even with their flaws. There's something humane, and democratic, about that. Yes, sometimes that can swing too far, and go from 'supportive' to 'vapid.' Yes, upholding standards is a sign of respect, and any college worthy of the name needs to do that.

    But I'd rather teach students by example that risk-taking is a part of growth than teach them that any sign of weakness bespeaks a basic character flaw. We're all flawed. That's not the point. The point is to accomplish things anyway.

    Thanks, Judith, for crystallizing so succinctly something that had brewing in my head for some time.

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Comments on Error and Failure

  • Precisey!
  • Posted by Michael on February 19, 2009 at 1:10pm EST
  • Dean Dad once again hits the nail on the head!

    As a former high school teacher and current doctoral student, I find it ironic that with all the criticisms hurled at K-12 education, most of today's 4 year college professors wouldn't survive their first observation by high school administrators. Chalk and talk lesson plans don't cut it in high school anymore - research universities remain its last redoubt.

    To four year college deans: A great researcher is not necessarily a great teacher. Pedagogy has to be learned! Teach it to them or colleges where teachers teach will eventually eat your lunch.

    M

  • Posted by Jeffrey Klausman at Whatcom Community College on February 19, 2009 at 1:25pm EST
  • From Richard Rodriguez' "Achievement of Desire": "Whenever I started to write, I knew too much (and not enough) to be able to write anything but sentences that were overly cautious, timid, strained brittle under the heavy weight o footnotes and qualifications. I seemed unable to dare a passionate statement." I'm going to post today's blog to my online environment--I've got about 1/3 of my second-year composition class students who are reverse transfer and about 1/3 (the same?) who are second- or third-generation college students.

  • Posted by Michelle Solomon on February 23, 2009 at 4:04pm EST
  • I wonder in part if this is why many people are hesitatnt to think critically, i.e., for themselves — for fear of looking/sounding stupid. I came to the conclusion years ago I cared naught for what people thought of me — well, all right; “people” means “people who don’t know me” or “people who are less likely to judge me.” It’s helped me marvelously as I meander through graduate school and earn my M.A. And it’s helped me to (and to determine how to) critique someone’s argument, and not them.

     

    Of course, I don’t feel failure because I don’t see it as a scary thing that should be avoided. (This from the girl who flunked out of college before going back and is now enrolled in a graduate program and is a teacher, too.) In my student teaching days (of late 2006), I gave a student an F for — wait for it — not doing the work. My student teacher advisor cautioned me not to give a student an F; I should have given her an NP (not passing) instead. This is the only time I can remember bluring out, “That’s stupid.” My advisor looked outright shocked, and I covered with, “...that we should have to give the students an NP.” Since then, I have given several students Fs, because as nice as the students were — it certainly wasn’t personal — they didn’t do the work and I felt I would be doing them a disservice to not learn about failure.

     

    I say, let students learn about failure, because I guarantee at some point in their lives they will fail. Let’s teach them how to pick themselves up after a failure and learn that one can learn something and move on.