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Defending Collegiality

April 30, 2009

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In his provocatively titled recent book, The No Asshole Rule: Building a Civilized Workplace and Surviving One That Isn’t, Robert I. Sutton argues for zero tolerance of “bullies, creeps, jerks, weasels, tormentors, tyrants, serial slammers, despots, [and] unconstrained egomaniacs” in the workplace. These individuals systematically prey on their co-workers, especially the more vulnerable ones, leaving their victims feeling humiliated, belittled, and demoralized. Their weapons include personal insults, threats and intimidation, hostile e-mails, public ridicule, and scornful interruptions. In the environments that they poison, enthusiasm for work gives way to anxiety, resentment, and a longing to get out.

The importance of a civil workplace struck Sutton more than 15 years ago during a department meeting at Stanford University, where he teaches. As his colleagues debated hiring a candidate for a faculty position, one of them remarked, “Listen, I don’t care if that guy won the Nobel Prize ... I just don’t want any assholes ruining our group.” Sutton describes the group as a collegial and supportive small department, “especially compared to the petty but relentless nastiness that pervades much of academic life.”

Although he goes on to cite many businesses that have the zero tolerance policy that he advocates, he does not return to his bleak characterization of academic life. Neither does he explore the reluctance of universities to hold faculty members to the rules of conduct that many businesses are implementing — rules that supplement standard prohibitions against harassment and discrimination — even while they apply them to staff. At my own university, for example, exempt and non-exempt staff are explicitly required to “cooperate and collaborate with other employees in a spirit of teamwork and collegiality” as a condition of their employment. Faculty members are not.

The reluctance to adopt a code of conduct for faculty members stems in part from a belief also expressed in corporate workplaces: that geniuses must be jerks and that some belligerence, indifference to others, and rudeness are inseparable from the achievements of a Steve Jobs or Bobby Knight. Sutton counters this view by observing that not all successful people are jerks and that jerks succeed despite their cruelty to others, not because of it. I would add that the odds are slim that the professor yelling at the departmental secretary spends the rest of his day bringing about a Copernican revolution in his discipline.

Sutton also argues that even in the extremely unlikely event that the bully is a genius, he still does more harm than good — which is why a Bobby Knight or Michael Eisner eventually wears out his welcome. Making exceptions for seemingly special cases can be damaging, not only in spawning imitators but in depressing the initiative of others. Sutton rightly emphasizes that “negative interactions have five times the effect on mood than positive interactions”: “a few demeaning creeps can overwhelm the warm feelings generated by hoards of civilized people.”

However, the November 1999 American Association of University Professors statement on collegiality as a criterion for faculty evaluation — while conceding the importance of collegiality to teaching, scholarship, and service — favors limiting a faculty member’s evaluation to these three areas on the grounds that vigorous discussions are essential to academic life. Adding collegiality as a yardstick, the AAUP asserts, is not only unnecessary — it risks “ensuring homogeneity,” “chilling faculty debate and discussion,” and curtailing academic freedom by stigmatizing individuals who do not fit in or defer to the group:

In the heat of important decisions regarding promotion or tenure, as well as other matters involving such traditional areas of faculty responsibility as curriculum or academic hiring, collegiality may be confused with the expectation that a faculty member display “enthusiasm” or “dedication,” evince “a constructive attitude” that will “foster harmony,” or display an excessive deference to administrative or faculty decisions where these may require reasoned discussion. Such expectations are flatly contrary to elementary principles of academic freedom, which protect a faculty member’s right to dissent from the judgments of colleagues and administrations.

Weeding out the gadflies, critics, and malcontents (via the criterion of collegiality), according to the AAUP statement, leaves us with the “genial Babbitts” and casts “a pall of stale uniformity” on what should be a scene of vibrant debate.

“Should be” is the key phrase here. The individuals Sutton is criticizing — the bullies, jerks, and so on — themselves chill debate through personal attacks, intimidation, and invective. One sign of this is the relief felt when they are away. Instead of disappearing, dissent blossoms, as individuals can now express ideas without fear of vicious recrimination and unfounded attack.

Thus, some faculty members have begun exploring codes of conduct, not because they want to squelch free debate but because they want to enable it. They are especially concerned about the most vulnerable faculty members – often newcomers with fresh perspectives and much-needed enthusiasm – who may shy away from departmental deliberations lest they jeopardize their personal futures. The motivation behind codes of conduct is not to make everyone agree but to let everyone feel free to disagree, allowing all voices to be heard.

The literary scholar Linda Hutcheon offers a version of this argument in her recent essay “Saving Collegiality,” in Profession, published by the Modern Language Association. While acknowledging the potential dangers of poorly worded and insensitively enforced codes of conduct, Professor Hutcheon reaffirms the importance of mutual respect, civility, and constructive cooperation to healthy debate: “Harmonious human relations need not stifle the right to dissent that we all so rightly treasure; instead they can make dissent easier, because safer. I fail to see how inclusivity and collaboration would necessarily chill debate.”

I think that this mounting interest in collegiality stems from the intensification of the forces arrayed against it:

  • A star system that widens inequities between the haves and have-nots and equates academic success with a reduction in teaching loads, service commitments, and other work on behalf of the institution.
  • Greater reliance on adjuncts and part-time faculty with little connection to the departments that hire them.
  • Tension between administrators and faculty exacerbated by top-down methods of management and increased demands for narrowly defined measures of accountability.
  • A poor job market that places individuals at institutions where they may not want to be, thereby fostering feelings of estrangement, disdain for colleagues, and single-minded efforts to leave via one’s research.
  • Heightened specialization subdividing already splintered departments.
  • Recourse to e-mail as a substitute for face-to-face collaborative decision-making. Its impersonality unintentionally licenses individuals to fight and distrust one another even more (as Sutton explains, “apparently this happens because people don’t get the complete picture that comes with ‘being there,’ as e-mail and phones provide little information about the demands that people face and the physical setting they work in, and can’t convey things like the facial expressions, verbal intonations, posture, and ‘group mood’ ”); and, finally,
  • Inadequate salaries and benefits at many universities, deepening resentment, stoking competition for increasingly scarce material rewards, and adding new urgency to often longstanding rivalries and feuds.

Add to these forces department chairs who are inadequately prepared for dealing with conflict, and an already fragile community begins to pull apart, giving antisocial behavior even freer rein.

The disintegration of community takes a special toll on academic workplaces. In a chapter of tips for surviving nasty people and hostile workplaces, Sutton mentions developing indifference and emotional detachment, limiting contact with one’s adversaries, and doing the bare minimum required by one’s job — in effect, disengaging. These are not solutions but survival strategies intended to assist individuals stuck a demoralizing job that they cannot change or escape.

So collegiality turns out to be important as well as endangered: important because necessary to the free discussions, voluntary service, and constructive collaborations that universities depend on and endangered because so many institutional developments militate against it. Thinking about the collegial atmosphere of a particular institution, one of the contributors to the Profession symposium wonders if it might not just be “the luck of the draw,” the happy byproduct of a mix of people who just happen to get along, rather than the result of institutional intention.

But other contributors rightly counter that some steps can be taken, especially by department chairs, to foster collegial professional relations: for example, modeling respectful treatment of others, expressing appreciation, hosting social events and lunch meetings, sharing information, informally consulting with and involving colleagues, distributing responsibility, supporting reading groups organized around certain topics, setting up forums where faculty members can discuss teaching or present their research — in short, creating a vibrant social context for decision-making and debate. It can be harder to demonize people you eat lunch with or see at a reception with their children. One contributor to the symposium shrewdly defines a dysfunctional department as “one where the main interactions with the faculty are around tenure decisions.” Embedding difficult discussions in a network of relationships cushions their potentially divisive impact.

At the same time, another contributor to the Profession symposium, Gerald Graff, makes the important point that these “soft” ways of nudging faculty members into collegiality, though necessary, are not sufficient. As “add-ons” or “Friday afternoon solutions,” they must compete with other priorities in a busy professor’s life. When deadlines call and the pace of the semester picks up, attendance drops off and enthusiasm wanes.

Professor Graff argues for supplementing these measures with structural changes in the curriculum such as team teaching, exchanging classes with a colleague at mid-semester, and teaching one another’s books. Overcoming the customary isolation of teaching enables collaboration to be incorporated into what we do every week.

There remains, however, the problem of those admittedly few angry, disruptive individuals whom no one would want to teach or mix with — the “bullies, creeps, jerks, weasels, tormentors, tyrants, serial slammers, despots, [and] unconstrained egomaniacs” that I started out this essay with.

It is always tempting to ignore these individuals, hope they’ll go away, or find some way of excusing them. In “When Good Doctors Go Bad,” Atul Gawande observes the extraordinary lengths physicians will go to look the other way even when one of their colleagues repeatedly botches surgeries, abuses patients, and triggers lawsuits. As with many cases of professorial misconduct, the people in the best position to see the damage being done can be in the worst position to take action against it: junior physicians, nurses, staff members. Meanwhile, senior physicians are held back partly by the tremendous work involved in documenting and substantiating evidence of incompetence and partly by social pressures.

There’s an official line about how the medical profession is supposed to deal with these physicians: Colleagues are expected to join forces promptly to remove them from practice and report them to the medical-licensing authorities, who, in turn, are supposed to discipline them or expel them from the profession. It hardly ever happens, for no tight-knit community can function that way.

As in academic departments, intervention gives way to avoidance but at great cost, in the one case to the incompetent physician’s patients, in the other to the abusive professor’s colleagues and students, who sometimes come into play as prizes to be fought over or enemies to be scorned because they have sided with a rival.

Even so, despite the odds against it, in hospitals and doctors’ practices sometimes the bad physician loses his license or gets sanctioned in some other way.

In universities, here is where a carefully designed faculty code of conduct can become necessary — as a last resort, when other interventions have failed and the behavior in question falls through the cracks of the faculty handbook. The threshold for invoking the code should be high, not just by one isolated outburst. But the expectation of collegial behavior, of cooperating and collaborating with other employees in a spirit of teamwork and collegiality, should be there — not as a distinct criterion for promotion and tenure but as a condition of employment for faculty as well as for staff. Once faculty members make the difficult decision to act against a disruptive colleague, they must have the means of doing so, lest powerlessness and frustration make their demoralization even worse.

After a code of conduct is institutionalized, it becomes everyone’s responsibility to use it. In my experience, most people treat others in the academic workplace with respect, consideration, and care, conduct code or no conduct code. My intent here has not been to legislate collegiality but to make sure that in those rare instances when enough is enough, when egregious behavior persists and reaches a carefully defined tipping point, faculty members and administrators are in a position to do something about it.

Michael Fischer is vice president for academic affairs and dean of the faculty, as well as a professor of English, at Trinity University, in San Antonio. Prior to joining the Trinity administration, he was dean of the College of Arts and Sciences and professor of English at the University of New Mexico. A longer version of this essay will appear in Change and is available on the magazine's Web site.

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Comments on Defending Collegiality

  • collegeality, cont.
  • Posted by LM on April 30, 2009 at 7:30am EDT
  • What is not mentioned here is the contrary of despots, the passive-aggressive. They are very polite and nice in public, but never come through with anything. They don't come to meetings, when cornered they say yes, yes, they will do whatever is it to contribute... and you never hear from them again. They don't vote in dept. elections, they don't contribute and they frequently don't even answer email. It's another form of tyranny, forcing the others to do their work and guess what they would want in the case of departmental decisions, since the only time you will hear from them is when they are angry!

  • civility and incivility
  • Posted by Cary Nelson , president at AAUP on April 30, 2009 at 7:45am EDT
  • There is no question that departments function best when interactions are civil. And there is also no question that universities can harbor near sociopaths who make department life unbearable. Institutions certainly need ways of isolating those whose behavior is routinely poisonous. A code defining ideal behavior is not, however, the solution for those cases.

    Collegiality codes are inevitably a weapon to stifle dissent, a way of suppressing those who would speak truth to power or whose views expose the majority to alternatives they'd prefer not to confront. Collegiality is especially dangerous when used as an independent category in tenure cases. But if a faculty member is so obnoxious that no one will serve on committees with him or work with him (or her) in other ways, then the consequences will show up in evaluations of teaching and service. That helps avoid political abuse of the category of collegiality.

    In the Finkelstein case at De Paul we saw collegiality undergo mission creep, as it was, in effect, applied to a tenure candidate's publications. Civility is not a requirement of academic writing, nor should it be. Not all ideas merit respect.

    Cary Nelson

    AAUP President

  • Call the question
  • Posted by Carlos , Target, Tenured Incivility at Hicksville U. on April 30, 2009 at 10:00am EDT
  • " ..Civility is not a requirement of academic writing, nor should it be. Not all ideas merit respect."

    Of course. That's why there are near-riots when David Horowitz speaks -- and few if any when Fake/Phony Indians do. Very few respect fakers.

    Public academia relies heavily on public financial support. If there is going to hostile incivility by the uncaring tenured -- "hostile working environment" invented in academia? -- the public wants to know what it is getting for its money.

    More Starbucks baristas? That appears to be the case now. And for that, they don't need a college degree -- just experience imitating Bart Simpson. Why waste the tax dollars?

  • Will the Real Asshole Please Stand Up?
  • Posted by John K. Wilson at collegefreedom.org on April 30, 2009 at 10:15am EDT
  • Cary Nelson is right (and, if anything, the AAUP statement is too weak in not completely all consideration of collegiality, rather than merely prohibiting it as a separate criterion). The example of Sutton at Stanford is illustrative: who is the real asshole there? The candidate who might be hired, or the professor who wants to ban him due to some imagined personality conflict? Hiring and tenure is tough enough using merit as the sole consideration. Add in some fuzzy concepts of "collegiality," and you have a mess where discrimination and violations of academic freedom are common (especially when administrators are imposing "collegiality" on faculty who dare to challenge them). We have far too many faculty who are placid and boring. We don't need formal rules to make them the only ones allowed on a faculty.

  • Civility and dissent
  • Posted by Jeffrey on April 30, 2009 at 10:30am EDT
  • While I have great respect for Cary Nelson, I have to disagree that codes of collegiality are "inevitably" a means of stifling dissent. As the article mentions, hostility and personal attack are far greater threats to dissent. I can think of three professors right now who, for whatever reasons, aim their anger at the individual rather than the issue; rather than disagreeing with an action ("I really think this assessment plan will cause a lot of needless work") they aim it at the individual ("You just want to control things, you always do"). The accompanying heightened anxiety--I've been told directly by junior faculty--shuts down those with less power (untenured, certainly adjuncts). I would love to see some kind of agreement prohibiting personal attacks. Given that, I can see how difficult it would be to word and especially to enforce. But as with assessment, my guess is that the creation of such an agreement in itself would have a positive effect.

  • Posted by sv on April 30, 2009 at 12:00pm EDT
  • I agree with Jeffery. In my experience intimidation by peers (many varieties) has been more damaging to free discussion than overbearing administrative authorities or badly written "codes of conduct." Trying to codify the terms of collegiality is admittedly a thorny issue, but I've also found that defending collegiality is best done at the point of hiring. Some such potential faculty members can be easily spotted at the interview stage.

  • Polite Disagreement
  • Posted by Jerry on April 30, 2009 at 12:15pm EDT
  • “Add in some fuzzy concepts of "collegiality," and you have a mess where discrimination and violations of academic freedom are common.”

     

    Perhaps John Wilson can explain the connection between collegiality and repression, because I just don’t see it. I’m not sure how the need to act in a professional manner creates discrimination and violations of academic freedom. Let the intimidators intimidate, the loud-mouths be loud, the bullies bully and all will be well? It seems to me that being professional doesn’t cut down on the ability of anyone to have vigorous academic debate and disagreement.

     

    I don't think that it's possible to make people civil, but it is possible to make them behave civilly. Many colleges already have codes of conduct for faculty and staff that include things like treating people with professional respect and courtesy, not bullying others, etc. You can find quite a number of them if you do a simple web search. We all expect our students to be civil and conduct themselves in ways that don't disrupt or abuse other students or faculty. Shouldn't we expect the same from ourselves?

  • Collegiality Should be Taken into Account
  • Posted by Henry Vandenburgh , Associate Professor, Sociology at Bridgewater State College on April 30, 2009 at 1:00pm EDT
  • At non-research places, lack of collegiality is usually the secret reason why people are not reappointed or tenured. Currently, what often happens is that committees make up falsehoods or distortions about the candidate's research, service, or even teaching as a pretext to non-reappoint or not tenure. I've observed this on four teaching campuses.

    Well-liked colleagues are frequently given a pass with a similar, or even an inferior portfolio.

    I'm tired of this bad faith system. I've been a victim of it (once), observed it (many times), and helped facilitate it (once). Let's actually have a collegiality criterion, since we secretly have one anyway.

  • Oh How Awful ...
  • Posted by Frizbane Manley on April 30, 2009 at 1:00pm EDT
  • This article has ruined my day. Try as I may, I cannot resist responding to nonsense like this. So I will make three points. First, my usual Paul Goodman quote (from “Compulsory Mis-education and the Community of Scholars”) ...

    “It is my thesis that the agent of this clinch is administration and the administrative mentality among teachers and even the students. It is the genius of administration to enforce a false harmony in situations that should be rife with conflict.

    Historically, the communities of scholars have perennially been invaded by administration from the outside, by Visitors of king, bishop, despotic majority, or whatever is the power in society that wants to quarantine the virulence of youth, the dialog of persons, the push of inquiry, the accusing testimony of scholarship.

    But today Administration and the administrative mentality are entrenched in the community of scholars itself; they fragment it and paralyze it. Therefore we see the paradox that, with so many centers of possible intellectual criticism and intellectual initiative, there is so much inane conformity, and the universities are little models of the Organized System itself.”

    Second, Cary Nelson’s remark, “There is no question that departments function best when interactions are civil” is bizarre. As soon as he tells us what “best” means we’ll be able to evaluate his thesis more critically, but you can bet your boots his notion of “best” will boil down to “whatever is in the best interest of the department chair.” Don’t you just love arguments that reek of tautologous, circular logic?

    Third, I detest wussy notions of civility. Difficult as it is, I admit I can imagine a professionally civil claque mathematician ... but I think I’ll cross the street when I see them coming. That’s just what we need ... academic environments that function on the order of the U.S. Senate. Oh, ain’t civility grand?

  • Collegiality codes are *always* designed to stifle dissent
  • Posted by little guy on April 30, 2009 at 1:00pm EDT
  • I dropped my AAUP membership years ago when the faculty generation that's now dying off completed its conversion of the AAUP from a principled professional organization into a self serving labor union. If the AAUP is going to again begin to take positive stands on matters of principle as Cary Nelson has above, I may have to consider re-joining.

    Collegiality codes, like the speech codes that student affairs people love and the insidious "dispositions" concepts of education schools, are *always* tools to stifle dissent. They are never advertised as such, but that's what they always become. The bullies in the stories above aren't the handful of loudmouths who lack social grace, they are the smooth backroom dealers cooking up the collegiality codes to wield against anyone, tenured or untenured, who doesn't kowtow to those in power.

  • Posted by steve on April 30, 2009 at 1:45pm EDT
  • Mr. Manley – Civility is the firmament for dissent. How do you think Goodman got his books published, his ideas listened to - people at his lectures, people at his publishing house acted civilly. Civil behavior is a prerequisite for radical thought – would you prefer that those opposed to a speaker’s ideas shout him or her down before the talk begins? Just look at Goodman’s own work – frustrated with the lack of civility among his intellectual brethren, he called for a form of community that could reaffirm dissent without tearing itself apart. I’m not saying we should legislate civility, but without it the public sphere (committee meetings, lectures, etc. . .) can’t admit radical ideas or any other for that matter.

  • Academia
  • Posted by Ileana Gutierrez , Media Specialist and Doctoral Student at Nova Southeastern University on April 30, 2009 at 1:45pm EDT
  • I am a doctoral student, and until today I had never really read this comment section. I have to say that I was very much looking forward to one day working in academia. After reading these comments it appears that there may be more animosity and ill will in academia that in a regular high school. Its pathetic that the ideals of a higher education are jaded by vented rage and ego centeredness. I have to rethink this whole joining academia idea. Who wants to spend time worrying about elevated jerks and misplaced emotions. The focus should be on working in a learning organization, one that thrives and strives for excellence in education and positive growth and global influence in a 21st century marketplace.

  • Collegiality is an administrative device
  • Posted by Professor , Professor/Journalism at Ohio University on April 30, 2009 at 3:00pm EDT
  • First, collegiality codes of faculty generation are much like faculty evaluation. Both seemed a good idea when considered and perhaps adopted; but now teaching evaluations contribute to grade inflation, reduced course requirement, and their use against faculty with intellectual standards by an increasingly intrusive administration. Like teaching evaluations, collegiality codes will become the tool used by administration to shut down those who resist half-baked proposals, budget adjustments, unfair pay raises or non-raises, and so forth.

    Second, I saw a dean at Ohio University do this in a vendetta against a senior professor who would stand up to this dean. The vendetta extended to friends of the professor who supported him publicly and then to spouses of friends who supported the professor. The tool was an ethics committee hearing a charge of harassment for which their was no accuser nor complaint.

    Third, on many an occasion, when faculty in my department have pushed for peer evaluation of classroom activity, I have said I will depend on the fair evaluations of my students before I ever agree to classroom visitations. Collegiality is a two-way street, and I've watched others and felt myself to be a Painted Bird when the majority gangs up on the majority with the support of senior administration.
    Professor, Ohio University

  • Conflict is Wonderful, Contempt is Not
  • Posted by Bob Sutton , Management Science & Engineering at Stanford on April 30, 2009 at 3:15pm EDT
  • I am the author of The No Asshole Rule, and after over 25 years in academia, I still struggle with the debate I see unfolding in the thoughtful comments. There is one distinction that I believe is important to make. I am not making an argument for the power of nice. Nor am I making an argument against conflict over ideas. The book, as well as my other writings, make a strong case for vehement argument. The key here was perhaps best summarized by Karl Weick, who argues that the most healthy debates happen when people "argue as if they are right, and listen as if they are wrong." Indeed, the very worst assholes I have encountered in academia make threats and do backstabbing against people who disagree with them -- so they use their asshole moves to stifle opposing views and political opponents.

    One other point I would make is that all of us -- since we are human -- are likely to be temporary assholes now and then. Many of us (I plead guilty) sometimes lose control and start yelling, or make snide and demeaning comments in the heat of the moment. Indeed, this is an unfortunate but predictable side effect of healthy debate. The question I ask is: What happens when there is a transgression? If the group puts subtle pressure on the offender to realize that he or she has blown it, and perhaps even to apologize, that is a sign of a healthy group -- or better yet, if the norm in the group is so strong that people acknowledge their transgressions themselves without prodding.

    Finally, I share some of the discomfort about having formal rules and guidelines enforcing civility, both because they can create pressures for conformity and because I worry that given differences in style and background that defining what it means isn't easy. But at the same time, open abuse, subtle hostility, and threats are dangerous to both health and creativity.

    Again, I find this debate and the comments most intriguing.

  • To Jeffrey, sv, steve, M. Fischer, Bob Sutton
  • Posted by Frizbane Manley on April 30, 2009 at 3:30pm EDT
  • Why No One Should Marry A Mathematician

    No one should marry a mathematician ... and especially no social scientist should marry one. Perhaps it has changed over the years, but the educational culture in which I studied and worked was very confrontational and there was little pretense of civility. It was common – and I mean it was rarely otherwise – to spend the day in “intellectual battles” with one’s fellow students ... and, later, with one’s colleagues. Indeed, one could be “right” and get little credit for being so because someone else was also “right” but in a more sophisticated or a more clever way. But at the end of the day, we would all go out for a beer together and talk politics, or sports, or science, or the arts ... whatever ... and laugh a lot ... and enjoy each other’s company. My point is that hardly anyone in that educational culture took criticism personally ... it was part and parcel of the learning and intellectual development process ... and little more. It’s difficult to turn that off at the end of the work day, however, and, of course, there is almost no end to the work day of an academic.

    As a mathematician I spent my career working with colleagues in the social sciences and business. There, it was rare to interact with someone who did not take criticism (a critique) of ideas personally. To point out the logical inconsistency of a political argument was tantamount to telling the political scientist s/he was an illogical dolt ... not that you either believed that or intended to make that point.

    Most non-academics imagine that all academics (say Ph.D.s) are educated in a fairly uniform culture. Not so. The professional culture for educating philosophers is markedly different from the culture for educating sociologists is even more different from the culture for training accountants. And the academic culture for educating mathematicians ... well, most of you simply wouldn’t believe it.

    Trying to impose civility on the entirety of the academic profession is not only practically impossible ... it is also intellectually shameful.

    P.S. I think the “civility” to which you refer, steve, is quite different from the civility presented and discussed above.

  • Defending Free Expression... Not Collegiality
  • Posted by G. Tod Slone on April 30, 2009 at 5:30pm EDT
  • The essay authored by Michael Fisher, which appeared in Inside Higher Ed and Change, needs to be torn apart, sentence by sentence. It is not surprising that comfortably-positioned academics would focus on “collegiality,” as opposed to free speech and expression. After all, it serves as a convenient red herring. Indeed, the real problem needing to be addressed is free speech and expression or rather lack thereof on the nation’s college and university campuses, which sadly seem content, for the most part, to adopt the corporate tie-and-jacket business model of behavior.
    Will the following comments be censored or otherwise kept out of the academic agora of ideas? Will they be deemed lacking in “collegiality”? Upon seeing the title of Fischer’s essay, “Defending Collegiality,” I knew instinctively I’d have to read and criticize the piece. After all, in academe, collegiality hardly needed defending at all. The large majority of job announcements I’ve perused over the past couple of decades listed it as a prime requirement. By the way, not one of those hundreds and hundreds of announcements I’ve examined mentioned as requirements: proven appreciation for democracy and courage to express ones First Amendment rights. What I’ve been noticing more and more is the requisite “appreciation of multiculturalism” with the evident implication that questioning and challenging it was not part of that appreciation. In fact, I brought that requisite to the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education’s attention recently regarding a North Shore Community College job announcement for an English instructor. FIRE and legalities pressured that college into dropping it, though evidently the mindset that created it would likely manage to get around that concession.
    The three letters of recommendation, absolute requisites for obtaining employment as a professor, served more than anything else as testimony of collegiality. After all, how many deans or professors would write someone a letter of recommendation who had been critical of them? Deans and chairpersons would weed out anyone suspected of uncollegial behavior by withholding letters of recommendation and providing terminal contracts. Being uncollegial, that is, critical, was a direct road to career suicide in academe. Everyone knew that, and that had certainly been my experience. Why therefore had I made the conscious decision to be critical, that is, uncollegial? Well, for one thing, it was an integral part of me, the Socratic daemon in my gut. Also, it accorded me dignity, something usually traded in when making that Faustian tenure pact.
    What desperately needed defending in academe was free speech and expression, which could easily be deemed as uncollegial behavior. Indeed, anything apt to challenge an institution’s inflated image might be deemed thusly. Of course, ad hominem and denigrating epithet should be avoided in any convincing criticism. But, as Greg Lukianoff, FIRE’s president, rightfully noted, “If some zealots had their way all such disagreement would be hate speech.” And that of course was the crux of the argument. Contrary to Fischer and Sutton, whom he quoted, critics did not “hurt organizational performance.” What they did hurt was organizational image.
    “Listen, I don’t care if that guy won the Nobel Prize ... I just don’t want any assholes ruining our group,” noted Sutton with tacit agreement from Fischer. That of course was a frightening statement! Democracy was never meant to be smiley-faced, cordial groups. It was meant to be vigorous and sometimes highly offensive debate. That was what academe should be. Evidently, it was not. And evidently most academics probably did not understand democracy. In fact, as an academic, I didn’t understand it until I ran into corruption and began educating myself with its regard.
    Unaware of the AAUP’s statement on collegiality, I looked for it on the Internet and read it. The following portion was worth reproducing here since in essence it really backed my argument against Fischer’s:
    “A distinct criterion of collegiality also holds the potential of chilling faculty debate and discussion. Criticism and opposition do not necessarily conflict with collegiality. Gadflies, critics of institutional practices or collegial norms, even the occasional malcontent, have all been known to play an invaluable and constructive role in the life of academic departments and institutions. They have sometimes proved collegial in the deepest and truest sense. Certainly a college or university replete with genial Babbitts is not the place to which society is likely to look for leadership. It is sometimes exceedingly difficult to distinguish the constructive engagement that characterizes true collegiality from an obstructiveness or truculence that inhibits collegiality. Yet the failure to do so may invite the suppression of dissent. The very real potential for a distinct criterion of “collegiality” to cast a pall of stale uniformity places it in direct tension with the value of faculty diversity in all its contemporary manifestations.”
    Sadly, perhaps with regards numerous AAUP statements, most professors and administrators did not agree with them, let alone actively support them. AAUP president Cary Nelson himself proved indifferent to my having had my arguments censored regarding an article he’d authored. In any event, what both Fischer and Sutton did not seem to understand was the very subjectivity of terms, including “bullies, creeps, jerks, weasels, tormentors, tyrants, serial slammers, despots, [and] unconstrained egomaniacs.”
    “One sign of this is the relief felt when they [bullies et al] are away,” noted Fischer. “Instead of disappearing, dissent blossoms, as individuals can now express ideas without fear of vicious recrimination and unfounded attack.” But what an aberrant statement! Approved, inoffensive “dissent” may blossom, but certainly not hardcore, offensive dissent.
    Fischer cited Hutcheon in an equally aberrant statement: “Harmonious human relations need not stifle the right to dissent that we all so rightly treasure; instead they can make dissent easier, because safer.” But dissent was never supposed to be easy and safe. That in itself diluted the very meaning of dissent. Sadly today, easy and safe dissent had come to be synonymous with academic dissent.
    Fisher noted: “Professor Hutcheon’s essay is her contribution to a symposium on collegiality captured in Profession 2006, a publication of the Modern Languages Association. I take this symposium as evidence of a growing concern about collegiality.” One must wonder, however, if the MLA ever held a symposium on free speech and vigorous debate. And if not, why not? Indeed, if the latter were in some way under attack at over 75% of the nation’s colleges and universities, as noted by FIRE, why hadn’t faculty become sufficiently concerned to provoke an MLA symposium on the subject?
    Fischer cited a report by the Higher Education Research Institute at UCLA, but failed, ask whether or not that study had queried faculty members as to what they thought of institutional critics? And whatever did “being a good colleague” really mean? Did it mean someone who turned a blind eye when his or her colleagues were engaging in intellectually corrupt behavior?
    “What do you believe should be done to best develop young faculty members?” asked the Institute. The response was frightening because “89 percent of the respondents targeted improvements in collegiality (versus 76 percent calling for better resources).” Why didn’t Fischer think that finding frightening? Indeed, as opposed to collegiality, I would have argued that to “best develop young faculty members,” professors needed to encourage them, not to smile and speak nicely, but rather to “go upright and vital, and speak the rude truth in all ways” (Emerson).
    Oddly or perhaps not, Fischer did not cite, among the MLA’s reasons for “mounting interest in collegiality,” an increase in courage amongst faculty members to speak openly. As well-known Spanish writer Juan Goytisolo stated: “Yo escribo lo que pienso, pero lo normal se ha convertido en anormal.” [I write what I think, but that norm has become an abnormality.] In academe, it has become an abnormality and that was what we should all be concentrating our attention on, not on collegiality.
    Evidently or likely, such an increase in truth tellers had not occurred. When I applied for a job I really wanted, I would be careful not to mention I was editor of The American Dissident. But when I applied for one I knew I didn’t have a chance of getting, I’d always mention the journal and never get a response with its regard.
    Fischer mentioned, though not necessarily recommended, “doing the bare minimum required by one’s job” for those who were not happy with their job. Of course, tenure permitted that. But it also permitted—for some odd reason, Fischer did not include this—those who were not happy with their jobs to engage, speak out, and otherwise manifest courage. Democracy depended on them to do that and they were really letting her down by not doing it. The real question thus was why did so many choose, when not happy, “disengaging,” as opposed to the engaging?
    “So collegiality turns out to be important as well as endangered: important because necessary to the free discussions,” noted Fischer. But how did he come to the uncanny conclusion that it was “endangered”? Because faculty wanted more of it, did not necessarily mean it didn’t exist. It was equally aberrant for him to argue that it was necessary for “free discussions” when in fact it was likely the chief inhibitor of “free discussions.”
    Fischer argued that “Valuing debate is one thing; knowing how to engage in it constructively is another.” But what might be considered “constructively” for Fischer might not be considered thusly for me. Indeed, for me, “constructively” was simply another term for “in bourgeois good taste.” It was sad that perhaps many educated academics somehow accorded objectivity to what was clearly subjective. Fisher noted the “persistence of their hostile behavior.” But again what might be considered or deemed “hostile” by him, might be free expression for me. Indeed, how not to think that the religious faculty members—at that public university where I once taught and openly criticized the prayer held in the beginning of each faculty meeting—did not simply dismiss my argument against such prayer as “hostile behavior”? In any case, I have been through this many, many times before and realized how impossible it was to convince academics who insisted that what was clearly subjective to be objective.
    Fischer noted again quite aberrantly that in ‘When Good Doctors Go Bad,’ Atul Gawande observes the extraordinary lengths physicians will go to look the other way even when one of their colleagues repeatedly botches surgeries, abuses patients, and triggers lawsuits.” But clearly, botched surgery had nothing whatsoever to do with perceived “hostile behavior” in academe. What collegiality really implied here was turning a blind eye regarding those botched surgeries. “It hardly ever happens, for no tight-knit community can function that way,” noted Fischer. But he amazingly failed to see that tight-knit resulted from collegiality and departments hiring collegial fit-ins.
    Fischer’s call for a “code of conduct” was really no different from the call for speech codes enacted at so many colleges and universities and fortunately struck down continuously by various court decisions. He noted a code of conduct should be invoked “not just by one isolated outburst.” But an “outburst” for him, one or a pattern of them, might be for me an exercise of constitutionally protected free expression. “After a code of conduct is institutionalized, it becomes everyone’s responsibility to implement it,” he noted. Fortunately, after a code was institutionalized, today an organization like FIRE might just end up challenging it in court. Expressions like “small decencies” and “you treat the person right in front of you, right now, in the right way” were highly disturbing in their evident subjectivity and bourgeois tonality. Yet Sutton and Fischer both seemed to think they were as objective as the greenness of the leaves. What they served to do was quell free speech and expression.
    Finally, when employed as a professor, I’ve often been highly critical of the institution employing me, as well as of my colleagues. Currently, I am unemployed and perhaps unemployable for doing so. Collegiality had prevented me from obtaining letters of recommendation from several of my previous employers. What I did was not call people names, however, but rather denounced egregious anomalies like the prayer mentioned above held at a public university. By the way, not one colleague at that institution stood up with me in that denunciation, let alone congratulated me. Some students, however, did congratulate me. Indeed, one sophomore said to me: “Dr. Slone, man, you’ve really got balls.” How sad it was for me to realize that student had already learned that speaking out today in academe took courage.
    Well, Michael Fischer, vice president for academic affairs and dean of the faculty, as well as a professor of English, at Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas, would I be wasting my time applying for that English-position opening at Trinity University?

    G. Tod Slone, Founding Editor, 1998
    The American Dissident, a Journal of Literature, Democracy & Dissidence
    A 501 c3 nonprofit organization providing a forum for vigorous debate, cornerstone of democracy,
    And for examining the dark side of the academic/literary established-order milieu
    www.theamericandissident.org
    1837 Main St.
    Concord, MA 01742

  • Some empiricism, someone -- please?
  • Posted by Sherman Dorn , Professor/Psychological and Social Foundations at University of South Florida on April 30, 2009 at 11:15pm EDT
  • I am delighted that Bob Sutton chimed in, or I'd have had to summarize similar points as someone who read his book and finds Fischer proposal interesting but ultimately flawed. Fischer suggests an interesting theory of action, that if we could just codify civility we'd have it, and claims that faculty have no such impositions. Nelson worries about the use of "collegiality" as a tool to stifle dissent. While I am on the side of Nelson on principle, both are generally ignoring more than a decade of experience in real universities that have imposed collegiality criteria for tenure. If Fischer were right, my own institution (with a so-called collegiality check and plenty of equal-opportunity investigations of faculty over the past decade) would be a paragon of civility. Yet I see the same backstabbing, passive-aggressive behavior, and bullying that Fischer and some comment authors complain about. If Nelson's fears were generally correct, these mechanisms would be a primary threat to academic freedom... yet while there was an investigation of my institution earlier this decade and the invention of a new AAUP category of disapproval (the condemnation) just for my university, I don't know of anyone who thought that collegiality politics were behind the case.

    The truth is that if you want a reasonable way to enforce a real code of civility (along the lines of what Sutton desires, including plenty of space for dissent and arguments), written statements are an awfully ineffective way to do so. I suspect someone has to confront the asshole and say, "Stop that," there has to be some consistency at the top (no fair instituting collegiality criteria for tenure and then letting one or two VPs bully everyone), and you can't claim that an institutional statement will do much.

  • Posted by junior prof in brooklyn on May 1, 2009 at 11:15am EDT
  • As a junior prof going up for tenure let me reiterate a point someone made earlier. There is no check on senior faculty being assholes. Basic rules of engagement that even senior administrators have to follow (no sexual harassment or intimidation, etc.), senior faculty are basically exempt from, even when there is a faculty union (you cannot grieve against other faculty for instance). My VP in a forum to a question about the possibility that junior faculty could get screwed by the dean or others in administration, made the point that we have more to fear from senior faculty than them. And he's right! There are rules and procedures for how administration can interact with faculty, and while they can and do try to get away with murder at times, there is a paper trail and there are avenues of redress. Not so with senior faculty who can directly or indirectly terrorize through gossip, through face-to-face demeaning behavior, or through scurrilous, borderline libelous behavior that becomes part of the written record, and once there is impossible to address.

    Let me give a hypothetical example. A junior prof goes up for tenure. Her senior colleague in the department decides he hates her. He bullies other tenured, though less senior, faculty on the committee to signing off on a statement attacking, say, a fault in her teaching, though it has no empirical basis. As anyone who has gone through the tenure process knows it is essential to have a spotless letter from the department. Anyway, the dean, even though he has been apprised of said surly senior, picks up on and repeats the criticism. As does the university faculty committee, as does the senior administrator who is the ultimate arbiter of tenure. At no point along the line is the initial assertion based on his bad humor up for review. Once in print, it's the truth, and there's nothing the junior faculty member can do.

    A civility or collegiality statement should not be about 'niceness', but about creating a system of accountability for despotic behavior among profs given to doing such things. These are types of behaviors that are generally already illegal and administrators already adhere to. Senior faculty should to. Tenure is the guarantee of academic freedom and freedom of speech. Not the right to engage in libel, sexual harassment, and generally making the workplace an uncomfortable setting for those who are relatively powerless. We have set limits on this type of behavior for administrators in the university and most everyone else in the workforce. It's about time we held senior faculty accountable too.

  • Is persuasion no longer relevant?
  • Posted by An Old Goat on May 1, 2009 at 12:00pm EDT
  • How odd that some educators believe that making one's points rudely or offensively is unavoidable or even necessary to academic freedom or freedom of speech. In an academic setting, if communication (verbal & nonverbal) is not for the purpose of creating understanding or of persuading, then communication is indeed reduced to its entertainment value (or as Frizbane seems to advise us, don't be boring). Too bad so many posters here discount the value of having academics behave more like, say, the experts who debate on PBS News Hour who find ways to disagree with opponents without insulting them. Whatever happened to starting from an adversary's point of view and leading him/her to the contradictions & dead-ends that become "teachable moments" for new understanding?

  • Response To Old Goat
  • Posted by Frizbane Manley on May 2, 2009 at 2:00pm EDT
  • Funny you should mention PBS News Hour ... and if you don’t mind, I’ll throw in This Week, Face the Nation, Meet the Press, and the McLaughlin Group, all of which I watch without fail each week.

    Here’s part of an exchange I had with a friend about those programs just a couple of months ago ...

    *********************

    FRIEND: Stephanolopous seems to bring out meaningful information and to challenge the person being interviewed by advancing opposing views -- all done politely, but firmly. And he always concludes with a smile and a display of warmth. The only time he fell short was when he interviewed Hillary in the primary. She absolutely dominated him and rejected his authority as to how the show was to be handled.

    MY RESPONSE: I agree with you about the Rove/vanden Heuvel interaction today, but I won't back off my criticism of This Week being little more than a parade of ideologues (who can talk but not listen) going back and forth across the table … and I know I don't need to remind you that being respectful (or even civil) does not translate into being thoughtful (or especially insightful). Granted they don’t often shout at each other, but they “talk through” each other with reckless abandon … and the dearth of analysis is, I think, obvious. I used to love that show when David Brinkley was the host – and even tolerated Cokie Roberts and Sam Donaldson back in the day (Cokie and Steve Roberts strike me as being a couple of haughty D.C. insiders). Truth be known, Fred, I think George Will has become as predictable and redundant (does that translate into boring?) as Maureen Dowd. Ugh!

    Anyway, I was very hopeful when Stephanopoulos took over (because I like him), but I think his show is no better than David Gregory’s or Bob Schieffer’s. And what does that mean? If I watch one of those shows and, after watching it, conclude that someone was very insightful or encounter something that causes me to get on-line to do “further study,” then I’m excited by it. In truth – and I almost hate to admit this – I get more interesting information from The McLaughlin Group – and despite all of their shouting at each other and the fact that it’s half the length of the others – than I get from all of those other programs put together. Give me Mort Zuckerman any day … and even Lawrence O’Donnell, Pat Buchanan and John himself. They send me to Google with interesting thoughts waaay more often than the This Week gang.

    *********************

    And OG, I don’t think anyone above tried to make a case for the rudeness and offensiveness you mentioned ... that’s your misinterpretation. And the mathematicians with whom I “grew up” were not “confrontational” to keep things from being boring – where did you get that? – it was just a Hell of a lot easier – and I happen to think more efficient and effective – than being saddled with the pretence of “civility.” And, by the way, even a casual reading of the responses above will suffice to convince practically anyone that this discussion suffers greatly from there being no clear-cut sense of what one means when one uses the term “civil behavior.” Have you ever read that funny little book, “Rules of Civility and Decent Behavior” by George Washington?

    Although I watch it faithfully – along with some of those awful people on MSNBC (but not Chris Matthews ... he’s too much for me) -- a great many of the participants on the PBS News Hour will “talk right through each other,” e.g. ...

    JIM LEHRER: Yes. How do you read it? Is ambivalence the right word?

    DAVID BROOKS: Yes, I don't think so. I think he just made a mistake for one day.

    JIM LEHRER: Made a mistake?

    DAVID BROOKS: I mean, they had this very impressive debate. A lot of senior officials were against the release; a lot of senior...

    JIM LEHRER: You mean within the administration?

    MARK SHIELDS: On the release.

    DAVID BROOKS: Within the administration were for it.

    JIM LEHRER: Right, on the release, right.

    DAVID BROOKS: They actually sat down. They had -- people were appointed to debate each side. Obama watched the debate. At the end of the debate, he made a decision and dictated the policy.

    And the policy essentially was, we're going to release, but we're not going to go back and re-prosecute the people. And that was the policy. It made everybody happy. And they announced essentially that.

    He went over and, in the middle of the week, he had a sort of rambling press conference where he flipped up, and he said things that he shouldn't have said, which opened the door to people thinking he did want to go re-prosecute.

    And then they quickly realized he'd made a mistake. They had a little discussion. And they slammed the door, and they slammed it, I think, quite hard. They slammed it using Harry Reid. And there's going to be no commission.

    And so I think, on the whole, the debate was very impressive. I personally think the policy is the right policy. And there was just that one day...

    JIM LEHRER: You mean the release was the right thing to do?

    DAVID BROOKS: I think both the release and the desire not to go re-litigate.

    JIM LEHRER: Not to go and prosecute, yes.

    DAVID BROOKS: I think both those things were right, and then there was that one day where he seemed open to it.

    Sorry OG, but I’ve already had my fill of that ... and without ever thinking, let alone thinking about following up on their discussion.

    Whew!

  • Unbelievable...absolutely unbelievable
  • Posted by Richard Baker , Associate Professor on May 5, 2009 at 3:30pm EDT
  • I am amazed at all of the drivel following this article. How can any decent person argue over whether other folks ought or ought not be treated with respect! There are simply no excuses for doing otherwise. Old Goat is right on the mark!