Quick Takes

November 17, 2009

The Terrible Job Market for New Grads

The job market for new college graduates has fallen by as much as 40 percent in the past year, according to new data from the Michigan State University Collegiate Employment Research Institute. The Michigan State study is based on surveys of 2,500 companies and other hiring entities. Last year, the survey projected an 8 to 10 percent drop in hiring, but the final figures are closer to 40, and an additional 2 percent drop is anticipated on top of that.

Duke Professor Publishes Book with Muhammad Images

Many advocates for free speech were outraged when Yale University Press, in publishing a book about the controversy over the Danish cartoons of Muhammad, refused to publish the cartoons themselves. Gary Hull, a Duke University professor, decided the best response would be to publish a book that included the controversial images, and through his new Voltaire Press, he has now done so. The book, Muhammad: The "Banned" Images, includes an introduction by Hull on "the basic choice between free speech and force, and the ethical issues involved in suppressing free scholarly discourse for the sake of multiculturalism," as well as a survey of the history of images of Muhammad.

Study Links Coed Housing to Binge Drinking

A new study suggests that students in coeducational housing are much more likely to engage in binge drinking than are students who live in all-male or all-female housing. The study, appearing today in the Journal of American College Health, is based on data on more than 500 students at five colleges around the United States. The research found that 42 percent of students in coed housing reported binge drinking on a weekly basis, while only 18 percent of those in single-sex housing did so. The researchers discounted the idea that student self-selection may result in those likely to engage in binge drinking opting to live in mixed-sex housing. Their rationale is that most students living in single-sex housing didn't request to do so, but were placed there by campus officials when coed slots are filled. The study was conducted by Brian Willoughby, a visiting professor at Brigham Young University, and Jason Carroll, a professor there. The university noted that Brigham Young -- which bars drinking -- was not one of the colleges studied.

Cuesta College President Quits After Short Tenure

David Pelham, who became president of Cuesta College in March of 2008, has quit his position at the California community college, The San Luis Obispo Tribune News reported. While the outgoing president is taking a job in the United Arab Emirates, an e-mail he sent out suggested that he believes there are serious problems at the college. He wrote that those at the college need to learn to "make decisions in a manner that is inclusive but faster," "disagree on issues without undermining the credibility of those with whom we disagree" and "develop a collective understanding that how things have been done in the past may not fit our present circumstances."

Distance Ed Via Flash Drive

Thomas Edison State College is using a new federal grant to develop a series of distance education courses for which all materials are provided on flash drives. The idea is that while a student would need to connect to the Internet to submit materials to an instructor, the curriculum could be carried out offline.

First Contract for Montgomery College Part Timers

The union representing part-time faculty members at Montgomery College, a community college in Maryland, announced Monday that it had reached a tentative deal with the college on a first contract. Details are not being released pending final approval by the union's members and the college's trustees. But a statement from the union said that the deal would include a "modest" salary increase, higher limits on course loads for part timers, and measures that would improve job security. The contract would also create committees "to review, and formulate recommendations for addressing, pay inequity between full-time and part-time faculty for in-classroom instruction, as well as to explore health insurance options for part-time professors." The union is affiliated with the Service Employees International Union.

SUNY's Athletics Programs Debated

With the State University of New York facing significant budget cuts, some legislators and others are questioning spending on big-time athletics, The New York Times reported. SUNY was late among public universities in moving to Division I athletics, lifting a ban on athletic scholarships in 1986 for the four research universities in the system. In recent years, SUNY's Buffalo campus reached a bowl game, and the Albany and Binghamton campuses have played in the men's basketball tournament of the National Collegiate Athletic Association, but Binghamton is facing a scandal in its basketball program -- and all system campuses are facing shortages of funds for academic programs. Peter M. Rivera, a member of the State Assembly, told the Times that athletics are "not the purpose of a SUNY school. The purpose of a SUNY school is to provide the best education possible.”

U. of Michigan Admits Gap in Reporting on Practice Time

The University of Michigan on Monday released the results of a July audit showing that the university's football team did not turn in required forms that track the amount of time players spend practicing. The revelation comes as the National Collegiate Athletic Association and the university look into allegations that the Wolverine football program broke NCAA rules limiting the amount of time players participate in athletic activities.

Concerns Raised About Suffolk's Priorities

Some alumni and trustees are questioning the direction of Suffolk University, The Boston Globe reported. The university has grown rapidly in recent years, building up its facilities and paying top dollar to its president, but critics say they don't see enough attention on improving academic quality. University officials reply that many of their efforts are in fact focused in that direction.

Williams Fires Visiting Professor

Williams College has fired a visiting professor who pleaded guilty to federal charges of fraud last week, The Berkshire Eagle reported. Bernard Moore had been a visiting assistant professor, and he had been the organizer of a political symposium that Williams canceled Friday. The fraud charges largely related to conduct prior to his arrival at the college, and a spokesman said that there was no evidence that he misused Williams funds.

Oxford Dictionary's Word of the Year: Unfriend

The New Oxford American Dictionary (Oxford University Press) has announced the winner of its annual "word of the year" contest: unfriend. In a post on Oxford University Press's Web site, Christine Lindberg, senior lexicographer for Oxford dictionaries, explained the choice. "In the online social networking context, its meaning is understood, so its adoption as a modern verb form makes this an interesting choice for Word of the Year. Most 'un-' prefixed words are adjectives (unacceptable, unpleasant), and there are certainly some familiar 'un-' verbs (uncap, unpack), but 'unfriend' is different from the norm. It assumes a verb sense of 'friend' that is really not used (at least not since maybe the 17th century!)." Oxford also released a list of some of the other words considered, including others that relate to digital communication (hashtag, sexting) and several related to current events (birther, death panel, teabagger).

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Comments on Quick Takes

  • Freedom of Speech
  • Posted by William Calin at University of Florida on November 17, 2009 at 6:30am EST
  • I salute Professor Hull and I thank him. We have to protect freedom of speech and freedom of expression. Whereas a number of European newspapers reprinted the Danish cartoons of Mohammed, only student newspapers did the same in the US, and, as likely as not, university administrations fired the editors and apologized. The cowardice is unconscionable. Yale University Press deserves the shame which it has visited on itself. We must all stand up to censorship, to fanatical thugs and to the fear of fanatical thugs. The Voltaire Press! What a superb name for Professor Hull's venue. Vive Voltaire et vive la liberte!

  • Freedom of Speech?
  • Posted by Mike , Associate Director at La Salle University on November 17, 2009 at 9:15am EST
  • Does Freedom of Speech always take precedent over any other value? This seems far to absolute, totalitarian and limiting in the scope of what Freedom of Speech means. Just as there should be room for scholarly and ethical debate surround the Mohammed cartoon, we, universities and publishing houses should have the right to express support for values we believe in as well as not support values we don't believe. Exclusion, as a form of expression, is a Freedom of Speech that should be protected as well. It is one thing to speak on behalf of one's self. It is another to speak on behalf of an organization. The organization has the right to say, or not to say (ie official university publications) what they feel is right. In this case, it may have been right for Yale University Press not to publish (an expression of their Freedom of Speech) while at the same time, it may have been right for Gary Hull to publish it on his own. It took courage on the part of Yale University Press and Gary Hull to do what they did. It is not at odds with one another, but the very essence of Free Speech. Otherwise, we risk dictating exactly what Free Speech is, which would inadvertently undermine the self same value.

    The First Amendment protects us from Congress dictating religion, the press and expression. It does not mandate what individuals nor organizations believe nor what they may or may not choose to support/not support. If anything, it provides protection so that individuals and institutions may choose what values they espouse, support and act on. If we start to dictate what individuals or institutions must allow/disallow, we approach the precipice of violating the very value of Free Speech we are hoping to protect. Dictating, mandating or otherwise prioritizing what speech is more important than another would constitute "abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press". Again, in the case cited, it may be a matter that both "sides" were equally enjoying the freedoms provided by the First Amendment.

  • Buy The Book
  • Posted by Mountaineer at West Virginia University on November 17, 2009 at 9:30am EST
  • I congratulate Professor Hull on standing up for a free press and publishing his book. It's only twelve bucks. I just bought it and I encourage everyone who believes in a free press to do likewise. Professor Hull deserves our support.

  • You're kidding me, right?
  • Posted by Guinivere on November 17, 2009 at 9:45am EST
  • I'm really surprised, out of what I'm sure is a fascinating list of new words, the IHE staff chose the term "teabagger" to represent "current events". All I can say, is wow!

  • Guinivere Misunderstands
  • Posted by Comm Prof on November 17, 2009 at 11:00am EST
  • Guinivere's point is not clear, but it's obvious that IHE did not choose "teabagger" to represent or mean "current events." (Did she miss "birther" and "death panel?") Rather it is a word that was popularized by current events themselves. The original meaning, uh, doesn't even have anything to do with tax protesters.... I'll leave it to someone else to explain it to her.

  • quibble
  • Posted by theron on November 17, 2009 at 12:00pm EST
  • At first blush, shouldn't 'unfriend' be 'disfriend?' On second thought, the word and the process it is meant to describe might better be filed under crimethink. Seriously, thinking about Orwell and even Ezra Pound's ABC OF READING, I worry about the clear expression of thought..ie the relations of word to meaning, grammar to the logic of thought...."the direct statement of the thing, whether subjective or objective."

     

  • If it walks and quacks like censorship...
  • Posted by Bulwer Lytton on November 17, 2009 at 1:15pm EST
  •  

    Mike, the comment "Exclusion, as a form of expression, is a Freedom of Speech that should be protected as well…l" is surely the starting line for a novel penned by a uniformed dictator of some insignificant Caribbean island.

     

    This is one of the best candidates for an award I have ever seen in IHE! Even if the novel doesn't sell very well, that line should be posted on many professors' office doors.

     

  • Why Yale was not exercising "free speech"
  • Posted by Rod Bell , Adjunct Prof - Political Science at College of DuPage on November 17, 2009 at 1:30pm EST
  • Mike has argued that Yale should not be pilloried for refusing to publish Mohammed cartoons, because Yale, like Gary Hull, has the right "to say, or not to say... what they feel is right. ... It took courage on the part of Yale University Press and Gary Hull to do what they did." Mike is right, I think, to maintain that a publisher has a right to reject materials that violate the publisher's mission, which may include advocacy. Hence a Catholic university might decline to publish an apology for abortion--or be subject to criticism from its constituency if they did publish such an apology.

    Yale cannot defend its decision on similar grounds, nor can they be defended that way. Yale's constituency would normally side with a liberal defense of freedom of speech in the sense that offensive speech, if artistically or intellectually justifiable, should be supported over the objections of those who may be offended. Yale University Press caved; shame on them.

  • Words
  • Posted by Steve Foerster on November 17, 2009 at 1:30pm EST
  • I usually say "befriend" and "defriend" when it comes to things like Facebook, but then, I'm probably too old to be listened to on things like this!

  • Misunderstanding is not on my part...
  • Posted by Guin again on November 17, 2009 at 1:45pm EST
  • Hi Comm Prof.......What I'm trying to get at are the editorial choices. The term "teabagger" has another meaning than the one used earlier this year in connection to the protests happening in DC. The other meaning has such strong sexual overtones that I'm surprised it was chosen by the IHE staff out of whatever list Oxford Dictionary has of new words, and that no one at IHE said, "Are we sure we want to choose that word since it can have a connotation of forced oral sex?" To me, the word is the equivalent to using the phrase "wolfpack" to describe a gang rape. Accurate? Yes. Sensitive? Not really.

  • Freedom of expression
  • Posted by Dr. Anthony Husemann , Dir. of Graduate Studies at Int'l Colege of the Cayman Islands on November 17, 2009 at 2:00pm EST
  • Americans love our freedoms. We allow "art" that depicts a crucifix resting in a jar of urine, but many cringe at showing pictures of "The Prophet" as possibly offending Islam. I cannot disagree that it might-and probably will do so. Nor am I condoning, necessarily that it does. However, the amazing thing is how it continues to be acceptable to denigrate Roman Catholic or Christian teachings, which never ask for the death penalty for those who do so, while it is patently politically incorrect to offend the Muslim faith. "Liberals", we educated types are called, but the question really might be when are we too "liberated" and when might we draw our own lines and show some respect for others' beliefs? As long as we're bashing "belief" itself, I guess it's all okay, right? Well, maybe. We're somewhat selective, it seems, on that one.

  • Academics taking priority over entertainment?
  • Posted by George on November 18, 2009 at 5:30am EST
  • I can't believe my eyes! A member of a state assembly asserts that the purpose of a university is "to provide the best education possible." He needs to sit down, have a few beers, and watch college football all day on television. Then he'll truly learn the purpose of college.