Steve, 

 

Already operating in Santa Fe are a half a dozen organizations making use of
the informally credentialed to teach the informally learning, if you see
what I mean.  They do it very well.  These organizations might need to be
encouraged, perhaps, coordinated, presumably, funded, conceivably, honored,
certainly, but they don't need to be duplicated. 

 

The only question in my mind - and you raise many good challenges even to
the question - is: Would "we", whoever "we" is, be happier 25 years from
now,  if there were a City University of Santa Fe offering graduate
education in the things that Santa Fe does best.  If "we" don't think "we"
would be happier, then I don't think "we" should do it.  Whoever "we" is. 

 

Nick

 

Nicholas S. Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology

Clark University

President and Groundskeeper.

The City University of Santa Fe. 

 <http://home.earthlink.net/nthompson> http://home.earthlink.net/nthompson

 <http://www.cusf.org> http://www.cusf.org

 

 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Steve Smith
Sent: Tuesday, October 12, 2010 11:59 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: [FRIAM] CUSF and Higher Educamacation in the City Different.

 

Nick -

Let me leaven any questions I might have stated about PhDs and higher
education with an endorsement of your ideas and intentions regarding Santa
Fe being a *good place* for people to be able to pursue a higher education.

Many of us here are beyond caring about obtaining more credentials, but many
of us may also have children or grandchildren or protege's who we would like
to see have the opportunity for a higher education right here in River City
(on the Alemeda or on the banks of the Agua Fria?).

While I think there are an *excess* of people qualified to teach the various
courses and seminars suggested by an institution such as CUSF, I fear that
few of them are *inclined* to do such teaching.   The City Different draws
the wealthy, the retired, and various species of the disaffected.  It isn't
clear which of those groups is likely to want to (or be quailified to)
teach.   

I don't mean this to be negative, I am just trying to frame why you may be
having so much trouble rounding up people to engage properly.   I, for
example, am barely qualified by most standards to teach much of anything
formally to anyone, and inclined only insomuch as I care passionately about
at least a dozen things.  Unfortunately I'm also scraping out a living (hard
to tell that with all of my blathering here) doing things which, despite
their spotty remuneration, are surely better paid than what I would ever see
as an un-credentialed adjunct at an emerging (or fully formed) institution.


I want you to find the qualified and energetic and full-of-perspective
instructors required for such an institution.   I want my daughter who
obtained a BA in liberal arts at CSF (just before they tanked) to have a
place to get some more of the same if she wants to return to the area (she
is in Denver working full time and pursuing an Art degree in her spare
time).  But I'm not sure such instructors are going to be easy to find with
both full PhDs and the time/inclination to engage.  

A more practical and (IMO) likely-to-serve-the-community deal would probably
involve a lot more people teaching/leading courses/seminars *without* as
many formal qualifications.  There are *many* ABDs (all but dissertation)
and even high school dropouts who can (and do) provide wonderful education
and mentorship on many topics in this town.  But maybe there is no way in
the existing academic climate to do that formally... it would not do
probably to bestow a bunch of honorary degrees on those who have gained much
of their skills and knowledge *in spite of* academia, rather than within
it's structure.  That would defeat the purpose of requiring PhDs for the
most part.

I applaud and encourage your efforts and don't want to discourage you from
*looking for* the instructor/leader/professor candidates you seek.  But I
want to encourage a parallel effort that might be less challenging.

When we talk next, I'll try to listen carefully and try to dig through my
network for possible resources that can help you with this endeavor... it is
meritable... it is a "good thing"... it is... and I hope others here will
renew  (discover?) their interest in your quest...

- Steve



What, in heavens name, Peggy, led you to think I believed such a
proposition? (Memorization = scholarship)  Do you really think, knowing my
writing on the list as well as you do, that I spent my 37 years teaching
undergraduates to memorize?  (I actually don't HAVE a memory.)  You are, or
course, on the correct side of whatever war you are waging, but you are not
waging it with me!

 

My only assertion was that formal advanced professional academic scholarship
has SOMETHING to contribute to the mix.  Santa Fe is a University town in
every respect  -- it has arts, galleries, music, theatre, a highly educated
population (in part), institutes, policy making organizations, earnest
discussion groups, research think tanks, undergraduate colleges, etc. and an
abundance of good coffee, -- except that it does not have (many) graduate
programs.   The CUSF idea  is to bring that last and final element of
University life to Santa Fe.  Since the City is already a university campus
in many respects, let's make that extra effort to become a City University.
Read around in the (primitive and ill managed) website www.cusf.org, and see
what you think.  Help me make it better. 

 

Nick 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of peggy miller
Sent: Tuesday, October 12, 2010 9:16 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [FRIAM] vol 88, issue 12

 

To Nick Thompson re "expertise"

The ability to memorize and quote things is not, in and of itself,
expertise. It is simple a great ability to memorize.

-- 

Peggy Miller, owner/OEO 

Highland Winds

Art, Photography, Herbs and Writings

406-541-7577 (home/office/shop)

 

 
 
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