*Here's proof-positive that US academics, however theoretically
sophisticated*
*they purport to be, and however much they know about their own subfields,*
*know nothing about propaganda, or about how "our free press" routinely*
*misreports and/or blacks out important news, in service to their owners, *
*and *
*their advertisers (and the CIA). About this COVID-19 crisis, they know
only*
*what's been dished out by the New York Times and NPR, which is to say that*
*they know nothing, while presuming that they're really well-informed. *

*So they're too terrified to teach in person, and outraged by the
expectation*
*that they maybe should, considering how much it costs the students, and*
*their families, to attend the schools where those professors teach. Nearly*
*all these **very comfortable professionals are so coked-up on fear that
they *
*can't **see how wrong it is to ask those students to sink into lifelong
debt to *
*pay **for what they'd get a lot more cheaply from the University of
Phoenix.*

*Although completely addled by the fear porn that they soak up from the *
*Times et al., and evidently thinking that their schools owe them a living*
*even if they won't go near a classroom, these professors see themselves*
*as radicals. Check out this (unwittingly) hilarious passage from
"Colleges *
*Face Rising Revolt by Professors," which the Times ran on July 3:*

*“Until there’s a vaccine, I’m not setting foot on campus,”* said Dana
Ward, 70, an emeritus professor of political studies at Pitzer College in
Claremont, Calif., *who teaches a class in anarchist history and thought.*
“Going into the classroom is like playing Russian roulette.”

*Does Prof. Ward think he's an anarchist, or does he just make a living
(and*
*no doubt a fairly handsome one) yammering about **"anarchist history and *
*thought"**—which he'll now do only via Zoom, until he can bend over for
that *
*lucrative **injection, whose (rushed) manufacture has been funded by a
syndicate*
*of predatory billionaires, to make themselves still richer? *

*Whether that guy deems himself an anarchist or not, Emma Goldman **must *
*be spinning in her grave.*

*MCM*

What professors owe college students

Jonathan Zimmerman

https://www.nydailynews.com/opinion/ny-oped-what-professors-owe-college-students-20200805-n35xljtf2ben3dz4pyimpdadgm-story.html

August 5, 2020

Hey, did you know that Columbia wants its professors to contract the
coronavirus and die?

That’s what the Twitterverse said last week, after Dean of Faculty Amy
Hungerford sent out an email
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__bwog.com_2020_07_email-2Dfrom-2Dcolumbia-2Dadmin-2Drequests-2Dthat-2Dgraduate-2Dstudents-2Dand-2Dfaculty-2Dreconsider-2Dteaching-2Dsolely-2Donline-2Dgives-2Dthree-2Ddays-2Dto-2Ddecide_&d=DwMFaQ&c=slrrB7dE8n7gBJbeO0g-IQ&r=WPIFbgNvuSsRXHIHf0ssPzSxvJeRYoM5Gwwk_VVYXnU&m=T7pTGfFkLxPICcnTIZQIYv4xHy3TA8TM90QRXu45Og4&s=rgASu82_-30cGLDp3b8FWodjzBe1KFgd9JSZ-9_4F-4&e=>asking
professors to teach face-to-face classes. Noting that most Columbia
professors had elected to teach online in the fall, Hungerford urged them
to reconsider.

The reaction from faculty — at Columbia, and around the country — was fast
and furious. “Here, we hope you’ll change your mind and come die in the
classroom!” tweeted
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__twitter.com_quidamabo_status_1287905314193510401&d=DwMFaQ&c=slrrB7dE8n7gBJbeO0g-IQ&r=WPIFbgNvuSsRXHIHf0ssPzSxvJeRYoM5Gwwk_VVYXnU&m=T7pTGfFkLxPICcnTIZQIYv4xHy3TA8TM90QRXu45Og4&s=4Jbhe0jC7cZvUclxuijgkMtu8uzT3TCPCNzg07x-4iE&e=>
 Rutgers historian Evan Jewell, a recent Columbia Ph.D. Building on his
thread, dozens of other posters hated on Hungerford for supposedly valuing
student tuition dollars over faculty health and survival. “It’s
inexcusable,” one scholar wrote. “Money can’t be more important than human
lives here.”

But here’s what almost nobody said: Students learn more in-person than they
do online
<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__mason.gmu.edu_-7Esprotops_OnlineEd.pdf&d=DwMFaQ&c=slrrB7dE8n7gBJbeO0g-IQ&r=WPIFbgNvuSsRXHIHf0ssPzSxvJeRYoM5Gwwk_VVYXnU&m=T7pTGfFkLxPICcnTIZQIYv4xHy3TA8TM90QRXu45Og4&s=o0hZuaQw2nT6MymiL3meDtdz-XOwpTJHUnWkc6deZeo&e=>,
especially if they come from first-generation or minority backgrounds. And
now that they are coming back to campus, we have a duty to teach them in
the classroom when we can.

The attacks on Hungerford were yet another reminder of how quickly
academicians can descend into the snarky, take-no-prisoners quagmire that
characterizes the rest of our culture. If you believe the professorial
social-media mob, Amy Hungerford isn’t just a harried administrator doing
the best she can in a difficult situation; she’s Cruella De Vil.

Even more, the Columbia dust-up demonstrates how fear and cynicism have
overcome all of us in the age of COVID-19. Of course, teaching safely in
person presents huge challenges. But that doesn’t mean we should simply
throw up our hands, declare it impossible, and denounce anyone who thinks
otherwise.

Unlike other places where students congregate, such as dormitories and
fraternities, the classroom is our domain. We can require our students to
wear masks and maintain proper social distancing. We can model good hand
hygiene. And, most of all, we can kick out anyone who refuses to comply.

Let me be clear: Nobody — I mean, nobody — should be required to teach
face-to-face. Senior citizens are at higher risk of contracting
coronavirus, as are people with a variety of medical conditions. Most of
them don’t want to teach in person, and we shouldn’t make them do so.

Now that many school districts have delayed opening, meanwhile, faculty
members with young children might want to teach online so they can care for
their kids at home. That’s exactly what I would do, in their circumstance.

But the rest of us should try to teach face-to-face, especially if we have
tenure. I worry that junior faculty members and adjunct instructors might
feel compelled to teach in person so they can hold on to their jobs. That’s
why the tenured faculty like me have to step up. Someone needs to teach the
students who come to campus. And if we don’t, it will be sloughed off on
somebody with less power than we have.

All of this will require our institutions to carve out small enough classes
to teach face-to-face. A 300-student lecture class can’t be taught safely
in person, of course. But smaller classes and seminars can be, if we play
our cards right.

That means equipping classrooms with extra masks and also with plexiglass
shields. It means arranging desks, chairs and lecterns so that they are
spaced appropriately. And it means wiping them down at the end of each
class, so that they’re clean for the next one. It won’t be easy, but it’s
also not rocket science. We can do it.

This fall, I’m scheduled to teach a freshman seminar that is capped at 15
students. It’s called “Why College? Historical and Contemporary
Perspectives.” I typically begin it by asking the students a version of the
question in the course title: Why are we here?

God help me if I have to do that over Zoom, which will raise a different
and much more depressing question: Why *aren’t *we here? The answer, I
fear, will be that the faculty lacked the courage and commitment to provide
the best instruction we can. Teaching in person will expose me to more
risk, to be sure, but I’m willing to do it on behalf of our students. I
hope you’ll join me.

*Zimmerman teaches education and history at the University of Pennsylvania.
He is the author of “The Amateur Hour: A History of College Teaching in
America.”*

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