when I teach "normative" things my approach is confuse the students as to what are my own views. like, I'm happy if half the class thinks I'm a staunch conservative. after some particularly intense terms I've wondered what my own views really are. inhabit the texts, lose yourself in them. "authentic" polemics in the classroom sounds so boring to me, both as a student and as an instructor.
― droit au butt (Euler), Thursday, 17 March 2016 17:45 (ten years ago)
The questions -- really, belligerent interrogations -- you posed in class today seem pertinent both pedagogically and epistemologicallythat's a lot of polysyllabic words in one sentence – and an opening sentence― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, March 17, 2016 9:41 AM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
The questions -- really, belligerent interrogations -- you posed in class today seem pertinent both pedagogically and epistemologically
that's a lot of polysyllabic words in one sentence – and an opening sentence
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, March 17, 2016 9:41 AM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
the professor who wrote that sounds awfully full of herself and convinced of her own righteousness. i'm sure some of her students are turds but this seems a case of it takes two to tango.
in other words,
but I think if you don't at least model a kind of Weberian "value neutrality" (which itself can then be reflexive and self-questioning) then you've failed to really create a pedagogical space, or a space in which actual teaching and learning can happen, and it's not surprising that students will respond to polemical or political provocations in kind
yes.
― wizzz! (amateurist), Thursday, 17 March 2016 17:45 (ten years ago)
After further reflection I think my optimistic mental model of what her course is like is not really compatible with her choice to write an open letter bagging on her students instead of taking it up with them in person
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Thursday, 17 March 2016 18:03 (ten years ago)
epistemologically and philosophically!
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 17 March 2016 18:10 (ten years ago)
Her students had belligerent interrogations in class as well as hollow stares and silent voices?
― Blowout Coombes (President Keyes), Thursday, 17 March 2016 18:11 (ten years ago)
https://i.ytimg.com/vi/dxPVyieptwA/hqdefault.jpg
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 17 March 2016 18:14 (ten years ago)
"their inability to put wonder bread on the table" reads to me as a classist jeer at ppl who are presumably too poor and ignorant to shop at whole foods or whatever
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Thursday, 17 March 2016 18:43 (ten years ago)
After further reflection I think my optimistic mental model of what her course is like is not really compatible with her choice to write an open letter bagging on her students instead of taking it up with them in person― Guayaquil (eephus!), Thursday, March 17, 2016 11:03 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Thursday, March 17, 2016 11:03 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Yeah, otm, obviously she's right on the merits of her course content, but there's a difference between having that knowledge and having the skills to get people to think about challenging ideas in real ways.
― intheblanks, Thursday, 17 March 2016 19:28 (ten years ago)
eephus! also otm upthread that students at the university level need to meet profs halfway by doing the readings and not dismissing ideas out-of-hand, something anyone teaching on race, gender, or sexuality has to deal with all day every day
― intheblanks, Thursday, 17 March 2016 19:30 (ten years ago)
ime students doing the readings was a problem for every humanities class no matter what the major or ideological perspective
― Mordy, Thursday, 17 March 2016 19:32 (ten years ago)
hasn't changed!
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 17 March 2016 19:33 (ten years ago)
yeah. i had some blank stares this morning and the assigned reading was just a philip k dick novel, so i empathize with anyone teaching the kind of stuff that the course in question was about. (on the other hand, maybe it gets them riled up in a way an old novel simply cannot match...)
― ryan, Thursday, 17 March 2016 19:35 (ten years ago)
yeah, good point xp @alfred
― intheblanks, Thursday, 17 March 2016 19:36 (ten years ago)
this is otm btw and i tried to do this when i teach and continue to try to do this whenever i read.
― Mordy, Thursday, 17 March 2016 19:42 (ten years ago)
i once complained to a mentor professor that my latin american politics prof was too conservative, and was basically told that I had been totally duped.
― intheblanks, Thursday, 17 March 2016 22:16 (ten years ago)
cuz Latin American politics profs are famously accused of conservatism
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 17 March 2016 22:21 (ten years ago)
lol the one conservative in the field :p but i can imagine if you're a student you might not know
― Mordy, Thursday, 17 March 2016 22:22 (ten years ago)
haha yeah, i was a callow 19-year-old, thought i knew better and was further left than most everyone else. I was also happy to judge others quickly, and likely to take the aforementioned "Weberian 'value neutrality'" as right-wing.
― intheblanks, Thursday, 17 March 2016 22:36 (ten years ago)
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, March 17, 2016 10:21 PM (55 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
i took a bunch of latin american literature courses that were all related to some political event/movement, so we always ended up talking politics. the profs seemed pretty left-leaning. what do you mean by conservatism? is defending indigenous rights and talking about how the us treats latin america as their backyard conservative? i got the sense that if you weren't on the indigenous peoples' side you were heavily questioned
this was in canada, by the way
― F♯ A♯ (∞), Thursday, 17 March 2016 23:23 (ten years ago)
he was being sarcastic
― uncle tenderlegdrop (jim in glasgow), Thursday, 17 March 2016 23:25 (ten years ago)
I was being sarcastic.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 17 March 2016 23:26 (ten years ago)
oh ya i tried reading upthread to get some context, sounded strange!
― F♯ A♯ (∞), Thursday, 17 March 2016 23:26 (ten years ago)
are you being sarcastic.
― j., Thursday, 17 March 2016 23:35 (ten years ago)
i just unkilled half of the users in this thread
makes sense
now.
― F♯ A♯ (∞), Thursday, 17 March 2016 23:36 (ten years ago)
https://camo.derpicdn.net/e55aab1348897449395cdbeb1aaa6dc2c4f252ab?url=http%3A%2F%2Fdata.whicdn.com%2Fimages%2F60407330%2Foriginal.png
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Friday, 18 March 2016 00:02 (ten years ago)
yeah, if you guys know a trick to getting students to do the readings consistently, whatever the content, let me know
― wizzz! (amateurist), Friday, 18 March 2016 05:12 (ten years ago)
the "trick" is to teach texts assuming the students haven't read them. when teaching a text I enact it, read passages as needed, my hope is to spur a few students to read it later. ime in USA it's better at better unis ; when I worked in brownbackistan it was way worse.
― droit au butt (Euler), Friday, 18 March 2016 06:58 (ten years ago)
yes—that and constant tiny quizzes on basic content to incentivize them
― j., Friday, 18 March 2016 07:33 (ten years ago)
The shift in ed-tech seems to be interactive text with micro-assessments built in that teachers can monitor but i imagine that would get pretty tiresome for the kind of students who just want to get on with the reading.
― On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Friday, 18 March 2016 08:23 (ten years ago)
I don't bother with constant quizzes because I'm lazy & hate grading. & (as a rationalization?) think that you can't teach good work habits in college, like if a kid doesn't care by then, then it's not my problem, I'm there to teach to the kids who care. the value of a usa college degree isn't much anymore, and whoever looks at grades (anyone?) knows that a B may as well be an F, so I don't sweat it: whittling down the As "matters", so I make it hard to get an A, and don't care beyond that. this is all in the usa, it's way different in france, guess I'd say better but I'm still too new to say for sure.
― droit au butt (Euler), Friday, 18 March 2016 08:37 (ten years ago)
happy to see this thread morph toward "how u teaching?"
― Keks + Nuss (contenderizer), Friday, 18 March 2016 12:12 (ten years ago)
i learned good work habits mostly after college
― There was a hole bunch of problems whit his campaigns (crüt), Friday, 18 March 2016 12:17 (ten years ago)
it disturbs me to think that whether a student will get an A, B, or C is pretty much fated on the first day of the semester so i try to make the work i give them capable in principle of helping them level themselves up at least one letter if they try.
― j., Friday, 18 March 2016 15:09 (ten years ago)
that sounds right to me, though everything rides on "if they try"
― droit au butt (Euler), Friday, 18 March 2016 15:49 (ten years ago)
i had a teacher once who imagined a course with an opt-in grading scheme, where you could do enough to get a C without having to do the work that would qualify you for a B, A, etc., and so on, with no higher grade guaranteed by doing the optional work. he guessed that would result in better work submitted, but a lot less work, since a lot of people would just take what they were comfortable with getting if it meant no extra work. that would be a nice way of figuring out whether your students actually are trying, save you the trouble of having to insinuate that they might not be trying, etc.
― j., Friday, 18 March 2016 16:14 (ten years ago)
it disturbs me to think that whether a student will get an A, B, or C is pretty much fated on the first day of the semester so i try to make the work i give them capable in principle of helping them level themselves up at least one letter if they try.― j., Friday, March 18, 2016 10:09 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― j., Friday, March 18, 2016 10:09 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
i don't think this is true! i've been surprised by students many times.
― wizzz! (amateurist), Friday, 18 March 2016 16:15 (ten years ago)
mods, plz change thread to Free Speech and Creepy Pedagogy, thx
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 18 March 2016 16:16 (ten years ago)
well, maybe they are "fated," but it often isn't evident what sort of student they are until well into the semester. and needless to say (?), some students are good at some things but not at others. perhaps a student will not make useful contributions to class discussion, but then does a great job on their first essay. in such cases it's a pleasant surprise.
― wizzz! (amateurist), Friday, 18 March 2016 16:16 (ten years ago)
xpost
ha!
my pedagogy is only occasionally creepy.
― wizzz! (amateurist), Friday, 18 March 2016 16:17 (ten years ago)
as long as it's cool that we're having this convo in this thread...
it's been interesting to see how many students in our major at my university don't turn in any work for whole courses: like, more than 50%? quite a bit more? 70%+? college is free so I guess most? students are just like fuck it, this is hard, don't want to try, who cares. I don't really get it. also it's illegal to have admissions standards being requiring that one pass the big high school exam (which does include philo tbf). however it's pretty easy to get kicked out of university if you screw up & all of these students who don't turn in work are kicked out. just weird but you do see pretty easily who is trying.
― droit au butt (Euler), Friday, 18 March 2016 16:24 (ten years ago)
admissions standards "beyond" passing the big high school exam, the "bac"
― droit au butt (Euler), Friday, 18 March 2016 16:25 (ten years ago)
Having just filed some grades and noted the number of zeros (i.e. outstanding ones), I usually wait until late April for the "My mom got bit by a gecko, can I still turn in my paper?" lines.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 18 March 2016 16:25 (ten years ago)
i do get surprised sometimes, but if i grade honestly then most students just start out not writing/thinking at a level i consider appropriate for 'A' papers, and it takes the kind of skill that can't be acquired during a single semester.
i'm seeing more not-turning-in-work-at-all when teaching online courses. but in person, last semester i had a student, at a very pricey private school, who had more or less been showing up all semester and even took the final, but then just didn't even turn in a term paper until i'd hounded and wheedled it out of them a few weeks after the deadline so they wouldn't fail.
― j., Friday, 18 March 2016 16:32 (ten years ago)
why bother hounding them? if they want to fail, let them fail.
― wizzz! (amateurist), Friday, 18 March 2016 16:34 (ten years ago)
and less grading for you!
― wizzz! (amateurist), Friday, 18 March 2016 16:35 (ten years ago)
inextirpable concern for student well being
― j., Friday, 18 March 2016 16:42 (ten years ago)
is that some cross being inexplicable and inextricable?
― wizzz! (amateurist), Sunday, 20 March 2016 22:04 (ten years ago)
?
― j., Sunday, 20 March 2016 22:10 (ten years ago)
http://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-arts-and-culture/books/198606/the-daoud-affair
A group of 19 professors in France drew up a statement accusing Daoud of a series of ideological crimes, consisting of “orientialist cliches,” “essentialism,” “psychologization,” “colonialist paternalism,” an “anti-humanist” viewpoint, and other such errors, amounting to racism and Islamophobia. Le Monde published their accusations. A second denunciation came his way, this time in private. It was a letter from the author of the New York Times Magazine profile, the American literary journalist Adam Shatz. In his letter Shatz professed affection for Daoud. He claimed not to be making any accusations at all. He wrote, “I’m not saying you’re doing it on purpose, or even that you’re playing the game of the ‘imperialists.’ I’m not accusing you of anything. Except perhaps of not thinking, and of falling into strange and potentially dangerous traps”—which amounted to saying what the 19 professors had said, with the additional accusation of stupidity.Daoud published the American journalist’s letter in Le Monde, just to make clear what he was up against—though he did it with an elegant show of friendliness. He explained that he, and not his detractors, lives in Algeria and understands its reality. He noted the Stalinist tone of the attacks on him. He insisted on the validity of his own emotions. He refused to accept the political logic that would require him to lapse into silence about what he believes. And then, in what appeared to be a plain and spiteful fury at his detractors, he declared that he is anyway going to do what the detractors have, in effect, demanded. He is going to silence his journalism: a gesture whose emotional punch comes from The Meursault Investigation, with its theme of silence. Or, at minimum, Daoud threatened to be silent—though naturally the calls for him to continue speaking up have already begun, and doubtless he will have to respond.
Daoud published the American journalist’s letter in Le Monde, just to make clear what he was up against—though he did it with an elegant show of friendliness. He explained that he, and not his detractors, lives in Algeria and understands its reality. He noted the Stalinist tone of the attacks on him. He insisted on the validity of his own emotions. He refused to accept the political logic that would require him to lapse into silence about what he believes. And then, in what appeared to be a plain and spiteful fury at his detractors, he declared that he is anyway going to do what the detractors have, in effect, demanded. He is going to silence his journalism: a gesture whose emotional punch comes from The Meursault Investigation, with its theme of silence. Or, at minimum, Daoud threatened to be silent—though naturally the calls for him to continue speaking up have already begun, and doubtless he will have to respond.
― Mordy, Tuesday, 22 March 2016 14:06 (ten years ago)
He insisted on the validity of his own emotions.
something like this should be written on the tombstone of the human race.
― ryan, Tuesday, 22 March 2016 14:09 (ten years ago)