http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2011/03/18/provost_designee_withdraws_at_kennesaw_state_amid_controversy_over_journal_citation_of_marx

The Would-Be Provost Who Quoted Marx
March 18, 2011

"In the university, the higher up the hierarchical structure, the 
more one has decision-making power and the further one is from the 
actual 'work' (discovering and disseminating knowledge)."

Timothy J. L. Chandler, the co-author of a 1998 journal article 
with that quote about university hierarchies, is going to stay a 
step closer to actual work. On Thursday, he announced that he is 
turning down the position of provost at Kennesaw State University 
-- in part because of furor set off in the local area over the 
article, which applies class analysis and several times cites Marx.

"I have decided it is in the best interest of Kennesaw State 
University for me to withdraw at this time. I feel strongly about 
the commitment that I made to elevating Kennesaw State 
University’s academic stature. However, I have now come to believe 
that the recent distractions caused by external forces would 
interfere with my effectiveness as provost," Chandler said in a 
statement released by Kennesaw State. Kent State University, where 
Chandler has worked for 20 years, most recently as senior 
associate provost, announced that he would stay on in that 
position and that "their loss is our gain."

Chandler's withdrawal came a week after he said he was not going 
to be deterred by the local controversy, and after Kennesaw 
State's president issued a statement defending the hiring. 
Chandler said at the time that he was "not inclined to withdraw 
from the provost position under the cloud of a Red scare."

Kennesaw State's announcement on Thursday said that the president. 
Daniel S. Papp, "emphasized that Dr. Chandler’s decision to remain 
at Kent State was strictly his own and is not related to any 
viewpoints that Dr. Chandler has expressed in previous academic 
work." (He has also been quoted in the local press as saying he 
was surprised by Chandler's journal article.)

In an interview Thursday night, Chandler said that the experience 
of being appointed at Kennesaw State and then feeling it was 
necessary to withdraw left him with renewed appreciation of the 
role of academic freedom, and some concerns about whether 
academics have done a good enough job of explaining the nature of 
scholarly writing to the public.

The news that someone withdrew as provost designee because of a 
long-ago journal article prompted some Georgia professors to say 
that academic freedom has taken a beating -- and disturbed some 
experts on administrative searches.

A search consultant who asked not to be identified because of the 
industry norm of not speaking about specific searches (and who 
played no role in Kennesaw State's selection process) said that he 
had never had a pick for a senior position feel pressured to 
withdraw because of a past work of scholarship. The consultant 
said that search committees of course talk about "fit" between a 
candidate and an institution.


But he added that "I don't think a person's scholarship and 
ability to administer" are correlated, and that the institutions 
he works with "want an able administrator," and have no interest 
in imposing "a political test." Institutions that let candidates 
be discouraged because of their politics end up losing good talent 
and "get what they deserve," he said.

The Column and the Article

Chandler's appointment at Kennesaw State seemed like a logical 
move up, given that he had served in the provost's office at Kent 
State, a growing public regional university. The controversy 
started with a column in The Marietta Daily Journal, written by 
three of the newspaper's top executives -- who did not respond to 
request for comment for this article.

The headline of the article suggests that Kennesaw State might 
need a new color (red) to go with its traditional black and gold. 
The column goes on to give a series of citations of Marx or of 
Marxist philosophy that appear in Chandler's 1998 journal article, 
such as "Increased competition results in increased ethnicity and 
racism." And: "Ownership is taken for granted in capitalistic 
societies and is central to the accumulation of wealth and 
domination. All ownership of land or material means of production 
was at one time or another obtained by force." And: "While the 
United States has the most sophisticated propaganda apparatus ever 
assembled, it is also the most violent nation-state in history."

The column closed by wondering whether Kennesaw State's alumni and 
business backers would want to work with the new provost. And in 
case anyone missed the point, a follow-up column said that those 
who wondered about the fate of Chandler's appointment were among 
the "Kremlinologists" trying to figure out the situation. (The 
columns also attacked Chandler for having had as his co-author a 
Kent State professor who has argued for the possibility of Bush 
administration complicity in the September 11 attacks, although it 
should be noted that the journal article in question was written 
several years before 9/11.) The original column was picked up by 
right-leaning blogs, with posts such as "Southern university hires 
Marxist provost?"

The article of Chandler's that led to the furor ran in The Journal 
of Higher Education and is a critique of the way colleges and 
universities have applied or failed to apply the ideas of Ernest 
Boyer's Scholarship Reconsidered. (The first page of the article 
is available on JSTOR, and JSTOR subscribers can read the article 
there.)

Boyer's work argued for a broader definition of scholarship, one 
that would include research-based efforts related to pedagogy or 
service, and that would get out of the tradition of defining 
research contributions simply by the number of books published or 
grants won. The article's analysis of Boyer's work suggests that 
he didn't go far enough, saying that Boyer was only "tinkering" 
with faculty reward systems, rather than considering larger 
changes that are needed in higher education.

The article argues that "with little or no say in the distribution 
of resources, faculty decision-making power regarding academic 
matters has limited impact, at least to the extent that the latter 
is dependent upon the former. In effect, faculty are given 
decision-making power as long as they do not upset the social 
order." To deal with this problem, the authors propose that "true 
participatory democracy" be brought to the university.

"We suggest replacing career ladders where faculty rise through 
the ranks to become administrators removed and isolated from the 
real 'business' of the university, discovery and dissemination of 
knowledge, with career lattices where administrative positions are 
webs of roles that change hands and impose fewer limits on 
individuals, their talents, and their interests. We envision a 
university where talents better match with tasks, promotion and 
tenure are reconceived, and a community of scholars works on 
important problems using a broad array of techniques of discovery. 
Furthermore, inter- and cross-disciplinary study would become far 
more common as scholars became more problem-oriented and less 
paradigm-restricted."

The Role of Academic Writing

In an interview Thursday night, Chandler said that in 
administrative positions at Kent State, he has in fact promoted 
collegial decision-making, but that he has also done all of the 
kinds of things that come with academic hierarchies. He has hired 
and fired, turned down budget requests, and so forth.

Looking at the reaction to his article, Chandler said that there 
may be a lesson for academe. "I think it's probably incumbent on 
us to explain the role of academic writing, and the role of 
academic freedom -- of the idea of testing and pushing ideas, and 
of encouraging people to think differently," he said. Many 
non-academics view academic writing as literal "advocacy," he 
said, in a way that isn't necessarily the case.

In that context, he said, quoting Marxist theory should be seen -- 
as is the case with him -- not as an endorsement of all things 
Marx. "I see it as one lens through which we can observe and look 
at the world we are trying to understand," especially with regard 
to issues of social class. "I'm not saying it's the only way or 
the best way, but it's a way, and those theories do have something 
to offer," he said.

Some of the writing in Georgia critical of Chandler has noted that 
he is a native of Britain -- "another strike," he quipped. He came 
to the United States to earn his Ph.D. at Stanford University and 
has stayed on, becoming a citizen. Much of his scholarship has 
been on the role of athletics and education in society, and he is 
the co-author or co-editor of the books Sport and Physical 
Education: The Key Concepts, With God on Their Side: Sport in the 
Service of Religion and Making Men: Rugby and Masculine Identity.

Chandler said that he thinks Britain may be more accepting of 
Marxist scholarship because of the dominant role of class issues 
in examining the country. "I think there has been a tradition of 
listening to and understanding a broad range of ideas on class and 
hierarchy," he said. "And remember where Marx wrote," he said.

The State of Academic Freedom

Hugh D. Hudson Jr., chair of history at Georgia State University 
and executive secretary of the Georgia conference of the American 
Association of University Professors, said that faculty members at 
Kennesaw State are "very concerned" about the implications of what 
happened to Chandler. "Public pressure can play an inordinate 
role. Outsiders made it a very difficult position for him to come 
into," Hudson said.

Hudson said that "it is the responsibility of the faculty to 
remind the community" of the value of academic freedom. "It's 
unfortunate that more people did not rise up in defense of 
academic freedom."

An education professor who is part of the Marxian Analysis of 
Society, Schools and Education Section of the American Educational 
Research Association said she was saddened by what had happened to 
Chandler (whom she doesn't know). "People think Marxism is the 
same as Communism, and they are not," she said. "Using a Marxist 
analysis just says that you know we have a class system and you 
are looking at it, but class analysis has become a dirty word."

The professor asked not to be quoted by name because she does not 
have tenure.

Another search consultant, who also has no ties to Kennesaw State 
and asked not to be identified because of the industry standard of 
not commenting on other searches, said she thought Chandler 
"dodged a bullet." "I think it would have been dreadful for him," 
she said. "The local press would have hounded him, and you've got 
people in legislatures these days looking for reasons to cut 
higher ed. He would have been the whipping boy."

But this search consultant said that Kennesaw State may be the 
real loser. "Would a really good candidate who values intelligent 
intellectual discourse want to go there right now?" she said. 
"They just cut their pool of good people dramatically."

As for Chandler, he said he was very happy to be back at Kent 
State. "I'm in an incredibly supportive environment, and an 
environment that values academic freedom," he said

Will he ever again apply for a provost's job? "Tonight might not 
be the best time to ask me," he said. "If I do look again, I will 
look very carefully at academic freedom as that is a critical 
feature that means a lot to me."

— Scott Jaschik
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