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In Praise of 'Community'

September 28, 2009

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The much anticipated premiere of “Community,” the NBC sitcom many community college faculty and administrators feared would damage the already less-than-desirable image of community colleges, is history. The first network comedy set on a community college campus and featuring a group of community college students had its debut on Thursday, September 17. It was a hit. Those who make a living by tracking TV viewership suggest that 7.7 million viewers tuned in to the comedy.

First, a confession. I knew and liked Joel McHale long before he was a “wannabe” actor. He arrived on the LA scene armed only with an M.F.A. and a newly acquired agent. I can remember applauding his gutsiness when he and his wife told me they were heading for LA, determined to make it happen. I knew how talented he was, but I also knew what a good guy he was, and don’t good guys finish last — especially in cutthroat Hollywood? Not this time. Not this good guy. From commercials to cameo roles to a cable show, his stock just kept rising. And last Tuesday he found himself on the red carpet at the New York premiere of Matt Damon’s new film, “The Informant!,” in which he also stars. Thursday found him on the “Today Show,” “The View” and all over the newspapers. Critic after critic (including the venerable New York Times) gave a thumbs up to “Community” and praised Joel’s portrayal of Jeff, the snarky, disbarred lawyer who showed up at Greendale Community College, filled with disdain for who we are and what we do.

So what’s good about that? Has my fondness for Joel blinded my lifelong loyalty to and advocacy for community colleges? Have I turned my back on a 33-year career as a community college professor, dean and vice president just because I know and like the star? Shouldn’t I be on the phone with Joel, telling him how shocked and appalled I was to hear him say “If I wanted to learn something, I wouldn’t have come to a community college”?

No. Let’s be honest. How many times have we all heard that type of disparaging remark — and attitude! — coming from some smug student who is “embarrassed” to find himself enrolled at a community college? And how many times has that student come to eat his words when he finds incredible faculty who know how to teach and who care about their students?

I hosted a “premiere party” for my colleagues at Prairie State College. We all groaned at Jeff’s disparaging remark. But most of us also found ourselves laughing. We identified with the cast of “Community.” We have all had students just like every character on the show. After all, we work at a community college, and community colleges are the most diverse colleges in America. We’re proud to say we work at one of the “loser colleges,” where we take students whom some would dub “losers” and make them into winners.

And we’re proud to acknowledge our lack of selectivity. In fact, we start out every academic year by telling our new students that they’ve come to a place where they can reinvent themselves. We tell them nobody knows their high school G.P.A., their class rank, their SAT score — and nobody cares. Because we don’t. We’re in the business of changing lives — and we are serious about our work. But that doesn’t mean we don’t sometimes see some humor in what we do.

We know we’ve always been the under-appreciated, under-respected, under-funded sector of higher education. But all that’s changing. President Obama, Secretary of Education Duncan, and Jill Biden are bringing us the recognition and funding we are due. And now — thanks to “Community” — we’re the subject of a network sitcom.

My colleagues and I hung around for an hour after the show exchanging funny stories about our students. I’m going to pass those along to Joel. His writers couldn’t possibly make up stories as funny as the real tales we have to share! But I’m also going to send him stories of the losers who made good. They couldn’t possibly make up stories like those either. Face it. Nowhere can you find a better source for comedy — or for heroism — than a community college. The premiere of "Community" convinced me it will show both sides. Let’s sit back and enjoy our newfound notoriety.

Linda Uzureau is vice president of academic affairs, emeritus, of Prairie State College.

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Comments on In Praise of 'Community'

  • Hear, hear!
  • Posted by Professor G on September 28, 2009 at 9:30am EDT
  • I too was pleasantly surprised by "Community" -- and I wholeheartedly agree with the sentiments of this column. The stereotype that plagues community colleges comes out of a broader ignorance and devaluing of education in our culture; it also helps to highlight the inherent contradictions in the rhetoric of the American Dream. On the one hand, everyone can make it; on the other, it doesn't count if you're not #1.

    I've never taught at a CC (though I would if an opportunity presented itself), but I've been a student for the odd CC course over the past 20 years. Wonderful, dedicated faculty and terrific classmates every time. These institutions deserve far more respect and acknowledgment.

  • Disagreement
  • Posted by Disagreement on September 28, 2009 at 9:45am EDT
  • I totally disagree with this article. I think the fact that the author of this column, a VP and a Dean can sit there and laugh at the show is just professionally uncouth. I have family who attended CC's and know for a fact that watching this show has not only embarrassed them, but disparaged them even more. It's not just about how the faculty views the show, it's about how students enrolled in community colleges feel too. Embrace the cold reality that the people who attend CC's don't exactly have it easy, and don't exactly have the means to get by. The fact that they are even enrolled is a huge step. So why highlight these students further and make a mockery out of it? Not ok. Not something that I would call respect for higher education.

  • strength
  • Posted by Gary Davis , Principal at Board Solutions on September 28, 2009 at 10:00am EDT
  • Only strong, competent and self-confident people can laugh at themselves. Our ability to laugh at "Community" shows that we are coming into our own.

  • Still not sure I agree
  • Posted by concerned sister on September 28, 2009 at 10:30am EDT
  • I appreciate your comments. You certainly gave me another way to look at things, but - in general - I've been unhappy about this show. I've taken community college courses and have a BA and an MA and currently work at a university. My sister is currently a full-time student at a community college. Sure the show might be representative of reality, but is that funny and should it be made funny? If community colleges weren't already the subject of jokes, I'd say ok, but these students don't need to be laughed at anymore. I'd think it would be much funnier to have the same show, but have it called Law School or Graduate School. That would be realy comedy - not just meanness!

  • Posted by Judy , professor/English on September 28, 2009 at 10:30am EDT
  • I have great concerns here. I agree that the show may ultimately overcome its initial labeling of and denigrating of CC's. However, how many watchers will have stopped watching by that time? How many will come away with the idea that we are "can't do's" because we're teaching at CC's rather than universities? (As one who has taught at a large, prestigious university and at community colleges, I'll take CC's ANY time.) How many understand the concept of satire? How many writers/producers/directors/actors on the show understand that CC's are not what they depict? How many people are being demeaned by this sort of show? It would be different if people already had a positive view of CC's and had even a remote idea what we really do...but most don't. As far as the President's programs, how many people know about that, either???? With all the misinformation out there, why should we be happy that tv is once again aggravating the problem? Sigh....Why not a positive, uplifting view with the comedic portrayed more realisitically; it could be hilarious in a very real sense. Oh, I know: that isn't what tv comedy is about.

  • What about "regular" colleges?
  • Posted by Sarah , Academic advisor on September 28, 2009 at 1:00pm EDT
  • Linda, I appreciate your ability to laugh at what is meant to be a satire. As someone who hasn't ever attended a community college, but has done a fair amount of research into those types of higher education institutions, I think the show does obviously present a lot of stereotypes, but not necessarily in a way that degrades the 40% of all undergraduate students enrolled in public colleges and universities (2009 Almanac of Higher Education, http://chronicle.com/article/Profile-of-Undergraduate/48078/ ) If we think about it, the show could happen on ANY college or university campus; granted a few more scenes would probably occur in residence halls, but we see those types of students at all institutions. The character Jeff's comment that “If I wanted to learn something, I wouldn’t have come to a community college” is also heard from students who don't get in to their first-choice school and have to attend the regional public institution in their state. Students have preconceived notions about how the quality of their education is tied in to the institution that they are attending; we would have to do a lot more educating to get that mindset absolved. At least community colleges are getting some more attention, rather than just being swept under the rug as in the past.

  • It's the students
  • Posted by Eric Gates , Sr. Consultant at ALEKS on September 28, 2009 at 1:15pm EDT
  • Dear Dean Dad,

    Having attended Portland Community College in Portland, Oregon for my first year, and having worked now in higher education for nearly 25 years, I can say without reservation that it is possible for any motivated, reasonably talented student to learn well at a community college, and that there are many motivated faculty working in these places.

    Let's not gloss over the problems, but Hear! Hear! Hurrah for the sucesses!

    May there be many more!

  • much to do about not so much
  • Posted by Bradley Bleck , English Instructor at Spokane Falls CC on September 28, 2009 at 1:15pm EDT
  • I too cringed when I heard the McHale character intone that if he wanted to learn something he wouldn't have come to a community college. I also have to admit that that was about the only cringe-worthy moment in the show, at least the first two episodes. Maybe it will get worse, but who knows. Despite that, I don't think there's much to worry about. Yeah, it plays on stereotypes, but what sit-com, or drama for that matter, doesn't? Maybe as we move along these stereotypes will be challenged somewhat. What I know is more and more students are coming our way and this show isn't going to change that, nor is it going to change how our legislature views us, how our 4-year colleagues view us, and so on.

    In many respects, this is a sit-com that takes place at a community college and is only tangentially about community colleges. Sure, the instructors we meet are a bit odd (loved the transition the Spanish teacher made from psychotic to typical in the span of seconds in episode two). The "real" story is about the interactions among the characters that come together on a CC campus. The CC, and CCs in general, are a character as well, but not one that is foregrounded. When the college experience does come in, in the Spanish assignment for instance, not only are all the students who watch the presentation confused and bored, but the teacher fails them, with an F and F-.

  • Healthy!
  • Posted by superdude on September 28, 2009 at 1:15pm EDT
  • I think it's healthy to laugh at one's own foibles, and to poke fun at one's own profession. Comedy, too, turns on the magnification of funny tidbits, if only for effect. As a university professor, I laughed out loud at SNL's reoccurring skit from a few years ago that had the two hippy "lover" professors.

    Was the skit a caricature of faculty? Yes! Did it have a grain of truth? Yes! The over-the-top performance is what made it funny. So, too, with "Community".

  • I agree
  • Posted by Sara on September 28, 2009 at 1:30pm EDT
  • I loved the show. It pokes fun in a fairly kind hearted way. My favorite moment was when the professor gave Joel's character the answers to all exams, only for Joel to find an envelop of blank paper. Isn't that about integrity of faculty?

    Two episodes in, you already see Joel's character growing, and I hope the writers do that for all their students including Chevy Chase's.

    I don't know what all the hoo-ha is about. Sitcoms and TV in general parody everything. So is the Big Bang Theory, a wonderfully written sitcom on CBS, damaging the esteem of world-class physicists because they are portrayed as nerds? I doubt it.

    I think drawing this kind of attention to community colleges can only help them. So far, the show has demonstrated that at CCs very different people come together and become friends and support one another. It shows that they can become more aware of the world around them. It shows that instructors can have integrity and a commitment to students.

    It is no secret why students end up at CCs. Often it is money, but also responsibilities and any number of other reasons. But at CCs students can take advantage of the opportunity to grow and change and make something of themselves. I seriously doubt a sitcom can destroy the motivation of students who want to get something out of the experience. If that is happening out there, I'm thinking there is a bigger problem with that student's motivation than is caused by attending a CC.

    I hope a lot more CC faculty and administrators share their thoughts and experiences with the show's writers about how much a student can gain with the right attitude, even if it is by showing Joel, the guy who has a lousy attitude about all of it, learning to be a better man.

     

     

     

  • Community
  • Posted by Wade Hannon , Assoc. Professor at North Dakota State Unive. on September 28, 2009 at 1:30pm EDT
  • As a graduate of Labette Community College (Humanities, '73) and a former instructor at two others, I did not find the show offensive. It is a comedy.

    I like community colleges and would not have any problems with teaching in one again should the right opportunity arise.

  • Posted by Prof. Challenger on September 28, 2009 at 1:30pm EDT
  • Dude -- It's a TV show. Who cares?

  • Differences between Community Colleges and Ivy Leagues
  • Posted by Ilene , Adjunct prof/Humanities at CCCS on September 28, 2009 at 5:45pm EDT
  • I think the University of Chicago or any other Ivy League school would be a good setting for a tragi-comedy series. Think of it! All those freshmen entering Princeton et al who commit suicide, drug overdoses and all sorts of unintended miseries. Now, let's shift the set to a Chicago City College (Community college). Think of it! All those freshmen entering CCCs after years, decades, and more of "unintended" miseries--the kid with the abusive dad or the sister with the murdered brother. From either perspective what's so funny about higher academic education? The time a student wrote that he slept on a hotel room. That was funny, and we shared a laugh. He will never again forget the difference between on and in. I know he was also a little morified and grateful that I was not there to insult but to help him. How much help do the students at the Ivy Leagues receive for all their money from their profs? I learned the real meaning of critical thinking at the University of Chicago. Everything my Northeastern Illinois profs tried to drill into my stubbornly intuitive perspectives and perceptions were so far pushed through the fabric of reason and analysis, that when I returned to NEIU, my ability to interpret literature etc., etc. was intensified to the point of being as sharp as the tacks that my professors could be. My education was done yet--not ever done yet. I began teaching at a CCC. I have been learning when to think critically and when to judge nothing because my soul takes over when a student needs me to listen to the reason she has missed two weeks worth of classes, and I rock her gently in my arms and weep with her because that's the best I can do. Why was she absent and why was she weeping? I've never lost a son or daughter to a gang member with a knife and an appetite for blood, hate, and rape. Why don't I doubt her? Why should I? Why on Earth would I??!! We laughed two weeks later when she earned an A, in spite of it all, on her midterm test. My students don't have to pay a lot of money, but for many of my students, a lot of money is relative to their earnings--which can amount to little more than nothing. Still, there is a lot of smiling, laughing, and fun every day, but the tone is probably a little less farcical than Community the TV show and little more serious. Why? The students and the faculty at the CCCs and other community colleges are not in school to become pompous asses, overblown elitists or richer than Trump and Oprah combined! Are the Ivy Leaguers? Hmmm. Stereotype--but not all stereotypes are false, and on that note, I simply ask the writers and creators of Community to be funny without being humiliating. Oh, the reason the students are in CCCs etc., is because they want to see if they really can become something, if they really can have good lives. And we, the faculty, are dedicated down to the marrow of our bones, souls, hearts, and intellects to help our students do just that and more. Can the profs at the Ivy Leagues say the same thing? I hope so!

  • I look forward to syndication elsewhere,
  • Posted by DFS on September 28, 2009 at 6:30pm EDT
  • Since I out of principle will not endorse NBC.

    Let future distribution enable my degree of advertisement tolerance.

    It's my time, not theirs.

  • really people?
  • Posted by a explitive cc student on October 14, 2009 at 5:30am EDT
  • Let me start by saying that i attend community college as the name i have entered suggest. i have a hard time imagining the kind of person who would complain about tv show just because it makes fun of cc's. that is retarded to say the least. if somebody is becomes so discouraged by a tv show, that they drop out of college, they were never going to graduate anyways. lets face it, they had to have been looking for an excuse to quit. it is a funny show and while it pokes fun at the institution, it shouldn't seriously lead people to believe that is what cc's are actually like. if you are that gullible, maybe you shouldn't be allowed to reproduce. do you hate the office because it makes the work place look bad? do you hate madmen because it makes all business men from that time period look like drunk adulterers? do you hate house because it makes all doctors look like sarcastic junkies? i will answer that for you... no. why should this show be different?

  • CC student
  • Posted by DFS , ` on October 15, 2009 at 11:45am EDT
  • You're not making a lot of points by imagining that you're still texting your posse while ignoring the grammar while posting here.

    Nevertheless -- and that's an actual word, dude/dudette -- I agree with your post with the following exception.

    House is all of that, but for those of us more experienced, we also realize that there's a lot more going on with House than narcissism.

    And, by the way (note that didn't take a lot of typing -- credos to you anyway for actually typing!), you're not scoring a lot of representation points for CC's when 'texting' as you have just done.

    We've had enough of your ilk in class.