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Transparency or a 'Selig Strategy'?

April 1, 2005

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As Commissioner Bud Selig and several prominent players attempted to evade subpoenas for recent House of Representatives hearings on baseball’s steroid problem, Rep. Henry Waxman observed, “What strikes me is that baseball doesn’t want to investigate it and they don’t want us to investigate it.” The California congressman summed up baseball’s policy as “don’t know, don’t tell.”

This “Selig Strategy” could also describe the academy’s response to indications that the nation’s humanities and social sciences departments suffer from a lack of intellectual and programmatic diversity. Calls for outside inquiries have been denounced as violations of academic freedom, while few if any signs exist that the very internal academic procedures that created the problem can successfully resolve it.

Instead of imitating baseball’s strategy of trying to cover up relevant information, the academy should bring transparency to the now-cloaked world of faculty hires and in-class instruction, compiling and publicizing the necessary data, probably through college and department Web sites. Such a response would allow the educational establishment to employ the habits of the academic world, namely reasoned analysis through use of hard evidence, to address (and, when false, disprove) specific allegations of ideological bias. At the same time, the exposure associated with greater transparency might deter those professors inclined to abuse their classroom authority for indoctrination.
   
Calls for any greater openness have encountered fierce resistance from some quarters of the faculty — as seen in many of the contests for the American Association of University Professors' governing council, for which balloting concludes on April 15. Four of the ten races (Districts 1, 3, 8, and 10) feature one candidate who defines academic freedom as chiefly a tool for protecting the professoriate’s dominant ideological faction -- to the point of resisting outside scrutiny and limiting publicly available information about academic matters. In a fifth race, for District 7, both candidates have endorsed this vision.
This cohort has deemed transparency a negative force, and instead has outlined a vision of:

  • Imagined reality, in which leftists and far lefists -- despite myriad surveys suggesting their substantial overrepresentation on the nation’s campuses — represent a besieged minority in the academy. In 1999, for instance, District 8 candidate Ellen Schrecker doubted that if “America was to enter another Vietnam War,” junior faculty members would “express themselves as freely as we did in the 1960s.” Though the professoriate’s outspoken hostility to the Bush administration’s Iraq policy belied this prediction, the platform of District 7 nominee Jeffrey Halpern nonetheless continues to assert, "The exercise of free expression among tenured faculty is being radically curtailed in the name of national security." Radically curtailed?
  • Professorial privilege, in which faculty possess an apparently unlimited right to bring their political agendas into the classroom. After a 2001 job action by the California Faculty Association included calls for professors to insert pro-union statements into their course syllabi, District 1 candidate Susan Meisenhelder scoffed that administrators who protested the policy overlooked how “important university traditions such as academic freedom” allowed professors to infuse their courses with political material. In this vision of the academy, undergraduates, like administrators, cannot even publicize their dissent. In early 2005, Schrecker charged that students who criticized the imtimidating behavior of anti-Israel professors of Middle Eastern studies at Columbia University wanted “to impose orthodoxy at this university, often in the name of academic diversity.” Better, evidently, for universities to cover up classroom misconduct, especially if the professors in question are expressing the preferred viewpoint on contemporary foreign policy issues.
  • Freedom from oversight, in which faculty members are responsible to no one and the goal of professional organizations is to conceal information that faculty ideologues find inconvenient. District 3 candidate Roxanne Gudeman promises to contest "unacceptable intrusions” that seek “to monitor and censor the political, ideological, and ethnic backgrounds of members of the academy and their teaching and research.” (Gudeman also champions ethnic and racial diversity programs, which, if nothing else, monitor the “ethnic backgrounds of members of the academy.”) District 10 candidate Michael Bérubé has committed himself to fighting "concerted and well-organized attacks on the professoriate,” including calls for an advisory board for Title VI area studies programs -- as if professors, alone among recipients of federal appropriations, are entitled to receive public moneys without legislative oversight.

The polar extreme of these viewpoints, of course, is David Horowitz’s Academic Bill of Rights (ABOR), which the AAUP has formally condemned as a political intrusion into the academy. The “Selig Strategy,” however, represents a remarkably ineffective response to the ABOR movement. Public support for ABOR derives from a perception that most professors have little interest in restoring intellectual diversity to the academy. In light of scandals at such prestigious institutions as Columbia and Colorado, faculty organizations issuing blanket assertions that all is well in their ranks and dismissing outside criticism as illegitimate only reinforces the impression that the professoriate has something to hide regarding the ideological tenor of classroom instruction.

There are, of course, occasions — the McCarthy Era was one, the early stages of the Vietnam War, perhaps, another — that justify aggressively utilizing the principle of academic freedom to prevent inappropriate outside scrutiny. But higher education, like baseball, is an institution whose survival depends on public support. Just as Mark McGwire sacrificed the public’s trust when he told congressmen that he would not “talk about the past,” so too will higher education’s public standing be diminished by continued claims that academic freedom allows the professoriate to ignore allegations of ideological bias. Even institutions not reliant on taxpayer support cannot long flourish in an atmopshere of widespread public distrust of the academy’s values.

Fortunately, a middle ground exists between the “Selig Strategy” on the one hand and having state legislatures dictate classroom content on the other. Transparency — not a claim that academic freedom prevents public scrutiny — represents the most effective way to respond to criticism of bias among the professoriate. “Sunlight is the best disinfectant,” noted Alan Charles Kors and Harvey Silverglate in Shadow University, applying Justice Louis Brandeis’ famous dictum to the problems of higher education. The Internet provides an unparalleled opportunity to demonstrate the inner workings of the academy to legislators, trustees, alumni, and taxpayers. If professors have nothing to hide, they have nothing to fear from drawing back the curtains regarding personnel and curricular actions.

To my knowledge, no university requires departments to publicly explain how and why they have allocated new lines. Imagine if every other year, every college department published on its Web site a statement about shifts in lines. For example, a religion department that had replaced one of four slots studying Christianity with one focusing on Islam might explain that it did so because of increased scholarly and student interest, post-9/11, or because the field had produced important new scholarship on Islam-related themes.

My own discipline, for example, has witnessed a sharp decline in positions in political, diplomatic, constitutional, and legal history over the past generation. Perhaps intellectually compelling reasons exist for dramatically shifting staffing toward adherents of the trinity of race, class, and gender. Yet absent any public justification, it’s hard to think of a reason other than ideological bias why, say, the University of Michigan’s History Department, whose ranks already included five U.S. women’s historians, used new lines to hire three more specialists in women, gender, and sexuality — all while the department lacks even one historian currently working in U.S. foreign policy.
   
Even more discouraging, despite the credible allegations of in-class bias by professors, I know of no university that requires faculty members to publicly post their course descriptions, syllabi, assignments, and lecture notes. The latter requirement, admittedly, would mean more work for professors, in that notes would need regular updating, but it also would provide concrete evidence that faculty members are always revising their in-class presentations to reflect new scholarship in their fields, while seeking to teach the subject matter at hand rather than attempting to shape their students’ viewpoints on controversial contemporary issues.

Of course, this strategy also would expose improper conduct to the light of day — as when Professor Joseph Massad, of Columbia’s Middle Eastern studies department, informed one class that “Israelis introduced plane hijackings” to the Middle East and that Zionist leader Theodor Herzl allied with “anti-Semites” to “help kick Euro[pean] Jews out.” Faculty members committed to the indoctrination approach could theoretically post neutral lecture notes while maintaining wholly biased classroom presentations. But such a strategy would constitute outright deception on the part of the professor, behavior that few administrations would be likely to tolerate.

In their platform, Schrecker (who has darkly hinted of an Internet-related “virtual McCarthyism”) and her cohort oppose any movement toward greater transparency. Might they fear that sunlight would confirm some or all of the outside critique of ideological bias? More ominously, do they speak for a majority in the academy?

“The thought police,” Harvard professor Stephan Thernstrom recently observed, are now “not just outside, on some congressional or state legislative committee. They are inside too, in our midst.” The educational establishment can imitate baseball’s 1990s strategy and ignore the problem, hoping that no one notices the ever more powerful internal threat to academic freedom. But, as Bud Selig and Mark McGwire have just discovered, the “don’t know, don’t tell” approach entails substantial risks. In this situation, transparency, not utilizing “academic freedom” to shield professors from outside scrutiny, represents the best course for the academy to adopt.

KC Johnson, a professor of history at Brooklyn College and the CUNY Graduate Center, is a visiting professor at Harvard University for the spring 2005 term.

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Comments on Transparency or a 'Selig Strategy'?

  • Posted by PersonFromPorlock on April 1, 2005 at 4:28pm EST
  • Well put, but why bother? The corrupt academy has already been replaced by the vibrant intellectual community of the internet. It's dead, even if it hasn't lain down yet.

  • Selig doctrine and higher education
  • Posted by matt on April 1, 2005 at 8:50pm EST
  • Is any one truly surprised that professors would resist this? Even if the fact that the teachers are stacked far to the left, and many instruct students to despise the very country and system that allows them to flourish, another fear would be that parents could find out how often their dhildren were being taught not by the professor himself but by a TA or grad assistance.
    And if you are going to charge full price for a class then the school is obligated to make the teacher teach more often than not, otherwise that is simply false advertisement. This also would hurt some professors from being bale to make the rounds of protests and speaking engagements.

  • Publicly posted course descriptions and syllabi?
  • Posted by Joe on April 2, 2005 at 5:56am EST
  • "I know of no university that requires faculty members to publicly post their course descriptions, syllabi, assignments, and lecture notes. The latter requirement, admittedly, would mean more work for professors."

    Check this "Professors" web site, I found on "Little Green Footballs" blog. Her course material and required reading list are very telling.
    I think parents should be informed in advance about the "quality" of diverse opinions availible on EVERY campus.

    Prof on steroids?

    http://faculty.ncwc.edu/Jchristensen/

  • Posted by Tim on April 2, 2005 at 5:57am EST
  • I can't wait for a student to sue a university for fraud with it's class descriptions.

  • Uuuuuu! Scary!
  • Posted by Jabba the Tutt on April 2, 2005 at 8:30am EST
  • In their platform, Schrecker (who has darkly hinted of an Internet-related “virtual McCarthyism”) and her cohort oppose any movement toward greater transparency.

    Appropriately, 'schrecker' means 'frightener' in German. She scares me, alright.

  • Posted by Angela on April 2, 2005 at 8:31am EST
  • I have to disagree with the notion of posting all of my lecture notes - my students would stop coming to class! You can put a lot of new rules in place, but I don't think it will change anything. Those that wish to be biased will continue to do so, regardless of whether we force them to publish their notes and other material.

    In the end, I think the market will win: if parents think that their students aren't getting a fair education, they'll send their kids to a place that is balanced. The same is true of donors: you need to question what your alma mater is doing with all that cash. If universities are no longer competitive (in attracting conservative students, and donors' cash), then they'll listen. But not before.

  • Posted by erp on April 2, 2005 at 9:07am EST
  • The pendulum of leftwing edbiz nuttiness, having reached the outer limits of irrational thought, is now on its inexorable journey back into the world of rational thought.

    Thanks to Ronald Reagan, Rush Limbaugh, Al Gore (for inventing the internet), bloggers, and the current crop of high school and undergraduate students, this is another war that we will win.

    Oh, and thanks to all the people who voted for the president. We're well on our way to winning the war for world peace. Pax Americana is here.

    Aging hippies, eat your hearts out.

  • Selig Strategy?
  • Posted by Larry Faria on April 2, 2005 at 11:13am EST
  • I think you're unfairly characterizing Bud Selig's position. He doesn't have the power enjoyed by commissioners before the players' union gained the upper hand. Selig should be compared to university administrators, who don't have the power to ensure the integrity of their institutions, and have to deal with faculty in the same way Selig has to deal with the players' union.
    Congress used the anit-trust exemption to look into MLB's drug testing, and cowed the union into cooperation. Only Congress can wield its tax support to cow faculty into yielding to the need for transparency

  • Proposals
  • Posted by Jeffrey Smith , Prof. of Economics at University of Maryland on April 2, 2005 at 11:14am EST
  • Some thoughts:

    1) I share Angela's concerns about posting
    lecture notes. I post mine after the
    relevant class so that students can
    use them to study with. Another
    concern (less relevant to the courses
    I teach which cover standard material
    available in dozens of texts) is the
    ease of theft of intellectual property.
    Someone working on a book based on their
    lectures should not have to post the
    lectures.

    2) I am a big fan of markets, but while
    higher education is much more of a
    market (particularly at the top of
    quality distribution) than secondary
    and primary education, the tuition
    differences at most public schools
    between in-state and out-of-state
    students mean that many good but not
    great students from middle income
    families have few real options.
    Making institutions that discriminate
    based on residence in either price or
    admissions ineligible for federal
    loans and grants (which would of course
    eliminate such institutions overnight)
    would create a truly national market
    in higher education. That would let
    market forces work to weed out poorly
    run institutions in a way that they
    cannot at present. An alternative to
    this, which would have the same effect,
    would be full privatization. There is
    no obvious reason why government should
    be in the business of *running* colleges,
    even it is in the business of subsidizing
    college students. Such privatization,
    which has already occurred in a "de
    facto" sense for some top state schools,
    would also create a national market, as
    private universities would have no
    particular reason to have tuition
    differences based on location of
    residence.

    Jeff Smith

  • Campuses are more diverse than this article purports
  • Posted by Peter Hanley at Temple University on April 2, 2005 at 2:31pm EST
  • As a former undergrad and current employee and graduate student of supposedly "very liberal" schools, I've found that many of the faculty that are employed are in the center or to the right of center, as many are also to the right of center.

    And of course, there's a small minority of professors on the far left. And far right.

    In general, I have fund that actual "punishment " of students (bad grades, public humiliation) is relatively rare. Additionally, I've found it is very easy for the average student to blame their poor academic performance on an external factor.

    Furthermore, extremist-activist students (of all shades, both looney left and wing-nut right) tend to push classroom discussions so far out of the realm of reasonable that they are often asked to be quiet by professors who just want to keep the discussion on topic.

    To wit: in class, a student does not have freedom of speech. All students speak at the pleasure of the professor and should be silent when asked.

    Of course, there are some disciplines that do seem to get a bit more radical than others such as women's studies or the business school (you think it's hard being a conservative in a women's studies class? Try taking a class in any business school and espousing some socialist views... you'll see some academic repression then =)

    To stop this from rambling too much, and to summarize: Universities have multiple avenues for students to pursue academic justice if it has occurred already, There is no need for a Students Bill of Rights that will second guess faculty, as students feel plenty free to do that already, believe me.

    With most faculty that I've met--if a student actually does the reading/assignments and is able to participate intelligently in class, the professor will be so delighted that someone actually cares about the material that I doubt the student would be punished for having views contrary to the teacher's.

  • Posted by veryretired on April 2, 2005 at 6:23pm EST
  • Hanley's comment, which consists of a variation of the famed comment by the New York media bigwig from 1972 who said, "I can't imagine how Nixon won---nobody I know voted for him.", is similar to the general response of the MSM and academic community when challenged for their overwhelming political bias to the left. Immersed in an utterly one dimensional ideological universe, he says, "Gee, I can't see that anyone's biased. They all seem very moderate to me."

  • Posted by max , too late ? at UMS on April 3, 2005 at 6:05am EDT
  • Well if the Lichter study is probative, sunshine alone will probably not rectify this situation. The magnitude and degree of bias that's evident in the distribution of ideological affiliations suggests to me that oversight attempts will be thwarted. And it appears that jr. faculty are even more doctrinaire than the current tenured population - so the situation may very well get worse.

    some other considerations...

    Could such measures make hiring and tenure review pro forma ? - ie. the real decision making may take place behind closed doors.

    Could such measures actually make these processes, along with course development, even more politicized then they are currently - I don't want conservative ideologues trying to impose their agendas any more than I do PC brownshirts. Such processes are often co-opted by hardliners.

    Could transparency become an excuse to do nothing ? - we see this frequently in governance oversight; all procedure all the time, but still no real accountability.
    ________

    I think that the defense ( restoration ? ) of academic integrity should be viewed as a long-term project.

    some ideas... [ED: dude, get your own blog ! ;) ]

    Make this an argument over standards, not ideology. IMO this trend is part in parcel with a decline in accepted standards of scholarship. Better scholars tend to understand and acknowledge their own perspectives.

    Comprehension before criticism. Motivate instructors to teach foundation materials before engaging in 'critical perspectives'.

    Penetrate the fiefdoms - fold gender and race-based programs into their respective foundational fields.

    Appropriate the logonomic space. Emphasize logonomic and semiotic functionalism, resist the passivity implied by popular accounts of semiotics.

    Promote rational epistemologies. The New Epistemology is really just the mysticism of many syllables.

    Condemn racism where it actually exists. Multiculturalism, in practice, is often nothing more than a kindler and gentler form of white supremacy.

    Tell liberals outside of the academy that it's OK to criticize radicals. This realization will benefit liberals and the academy too !

    Demonstrate that relativism and situationalism are mutually contradictory - if your situatedness provides a more accurate perspective on events, then relativism is false.

    Be prepared to fight - develop mutual defense networks among public intellectuals and academics. As the saying goes, if you're going to attack the king you have to be ready to kill him. The authoritarian left has achieved its prominence in the academy by coercion and intimidation. These tactics are their sword and shield. Any attempt to confront this element should be coordinated so that their reprisals are met with an overwhelming response.

    And lastly, don't be afraid to engage the public. Despite conventional academic wisdom, 'joe sixpack' is actually very interested in ensuring that academia provides an avenue to social mobility. These folks may not understand the parlance of academic debate, but they possess a profound ethical and moral sense. If we can get them on our side they'll be a most effective moderating force.

    .. my two cents

  • Public v. Private Information
  • Posted by Jonathan Dresner at University of Hawai'i at Hilo on April 4, 2005 at 4:48am EDT
  • I would not post my lecture notes on the web for several reasons, not the least of which is that my notes bear only a vague relationship to what comes out of my mouth and the discussions that arise. If I was preparing them as handouts and study materials for students, I would prepare them very differently. The second knee-jerk reaction I have to this suggestion is that it raises, once again, the question of intellectual property ownership; is the value of public transparency so great that it overrides my right to control access to my work?

    I would note, though, contra to Prof. Johnson's arguments, that the accreditation agencies (at least WASC, which was here recently) are pushing institutions to collect and publish syllabi and other course materials on the web. And thousands of individual faculty members have, like myself (see my website linked below), voluntarily and even eagerly embraced the web as a means of preserving and promulgating our syllabi and course materials. So whatever the "selig" strategy is, it isn't uniform.

  • I said campuses are diverse, not moderate
  • Posted by Peter Hanley at Temple University on April 6, 2005 at 10:35am EDT
  • I'm confused how veryretired would construe statements such as "you think it’s hard being a conservative in a women’s studies class? Try taking a class in any business school and espousing some socialist views... you’ll see some academic repression then " as being an indication that I see everyone around me on campus as moderate.

    The point of my post was that in my view campuses are very diverse, as the US is, with professors ranging from the far-right to the far-left, with most in between. I think there is uneven distribution in some colleges, and I think my examples of the liberal arts being generally liberal (with the exception of some disciplines such as political science) and business schools being generally conservative.

    My counter charge is that verytired is a good example of people on the further right: So convinced of the sinister stench of the radical left being entrenched everywhere that every moderate is assumed to be left of Ralph Nader.