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More Confessions of an Unpretentious, Anti-Academia Professor

I spent a lot of time with college parents this summer as part of my kid’s orientation and as part of our recruiting efforts on campus. What I learned is that I’m apparently more parent than professor, as I cared greatly about how much the college experience cost, what majors were available, what services could help my kid succeed and what jobs were at the end of this extremely expensive rainbow.

Despite what so many academics around here believe, not once did I, nor anyone else in these groups, ask, “But wait, what about the broadening of their horizons through general education courses that will offer my child a transformative life experience?”

I’ve thought about that a lot lately as my institution of higher learning is undergoing some fundamental changes, to put it mildly, even as a core group of academics attempt to obstruct changes necessitated by the unfortunate presence of reality.

Also, I got an alert the other day to tell me that while my institution is cutting hundreds of jobs, the system that oversees us and the other 12 schools that are mostly in trouble is spending a half-million dollars to rebrand itself. It also doesn’t help  that calling our system the “Universities of Wisconsin” is likely to really piss off at least a dozen other institutions of higher learning in this state that aren’t part of our system.

Over the years, I’ve attempted to make sense of things like this that make no sense to anyone who has common sense, only to realize that while I work in academia, I’m in no way an academic. With that in mind, here are even more confessions of an unpretentious, anti-academia professor.

(If you missed the first round, here you go…)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Nearly half of these people come from three major areas, none of which would lead my dad to say, “Great choice of a major, son! With that major, I’m sure you’ll have a financially and emotionally fulfilling career and never have to live in our basement after graduation!” Speaking of career paths, of the major areas listed here, I can only realistically count TWO that could make a solid case for a “college to career” path, something I emphasize in every class I teach. So, “representative governance,” my ass…

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