Eric,

 

A Marxist would say, I think, although I have barely ever known one, that every 
act of training is simultaneously an act of indoctrination and class 
reproduction.  If the declaration of independence is correct, what an 
extraordinary coincidence it is that the children of wealthy well educated 
people tend to be wealthy and well educated!   Well, some would say that that’s 
because ABILITY is inherited.  But that precisely is racism, isn’t it?  

 

So if, as our colleagues are starting to assert, technical proficiency is an 
evanescent benefit, what precisely remains of a “good” education but 
indoctrination in class values and the  inheritance of class benefits?  This is 
NOT for me a rhetorical question, because I gave up on the technical 
proficiency justification (except perhaps for writing) before I even became a  
professor.  So what WAS it I was conveying to my students all those years, if 
not the indoctrination of class values and the inheritance of class benefits?  
Inquiring Readers Want to Know! 

 

Nick 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

 <mailto:thompnicks...@gmail.com> thompnicks...@gmail.com

 <https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/> 
https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <friam-boun...@redfish.com> On Behalf Of Eric Charles
Sent: Thursday, July 30, 2020 1:02 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <friam@redfish.com>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] "certain codes of conduct"

 

Come on Nick... outside new disciplines emerging, those who will change a 
discipline over the next 20 years are typically well embedded within the 
discipline now. That's kind of how cumulative knowledge construction works. 
But... to emphasize it a bit more bluntly.... The primary purpose of college 
isn't to reproduce the professoriate, or produce the next generation of 
innovators within the professorate: It is to provide a general set of skills 
(sometimes called the "hidden curriculum"), which provides a baseline of things 
a person with a college degree can reasonably be expected to be able to do. 
College is justified by the assertion that you can't really get those skills 
outside of trying to do something intellectual with some seriousness; what you 
are trying to be intellectually serious about doesn't matter nearly so much, 
though obviously some skills will be emphasized more in some areas. 

 

Most jobs most people want require "a college degree". They don't require a 
college degree in anything in particular. That makes sense, IF college degrees 
are reasonably well correlated with having some set of skills most general 
employers value in most of their employees. It generally helps to have 
employees who can read, write, and math at a certain level, who can present 
things in standard forms orally, graphically, and in writing. It generally 
helps to have employees who can integrate ideas and come up with solutions, who 
can balance various priorities, who can adapt to arbitrary requirements that a 
boss or company might impose. It generally helps to have employees who can work 
productively on team projects, as leaders or followers. Etc., etc. The less 
college degrees reliably indicate those skills, the less valuable they are (on 
average). 

 

There is a quirky college that revamped it's curriculum a few decades ago to 
focus on "8 Abilities": Communication, Problem Solving, Social Interaction, 
Effective Citizenship, Analysis, Valuing, Aesthetic Engagement, and Developing 
a Global Perspective. It looks like they've gone back a bit towards traditional 
majors, but still all classes, in all majors, have to explicitly focus on 
developing at least one of those abilities in the students. 
(https://www.alverno.edu/Undergraduate)

 

Most colleges are not doing anything so dramatic, but many are still making 
great strides in helping students figure out skills that others arrive with, so 
they can at least start from a more even place. See examples here:  

 

https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2014/08/04/book-argues-mentoring-programs-should-try-unveil-colleges-hidden-curriculum
 

 

http://thehub.georgetown.domains/realhub/experience/mastering-the-hidden-curriculum-1-2/
 


https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/297173-the-hidden-curriculum  

 

 

On Wed, Jul 29, 2020 at 5:54 PM <thompnicks...@gmail.com 
<mailto:thompnicks...@gmail.com> > wrote:

Hi, Eric, 

 

Thanks for laying this out.  I think some of it’s wrong, but it’s clear and 
provocative.  I apologize to non-academics on the list for my focus on 
academia.  I suppose one might argue that the best thing that might happen to 
Massachusetts is the dismemberment of Harvard and the distribution of its 
buildings for housing and it’s endowment for income equalization.  But I don’t 
think so.  Not yet, any way.

 

To the extent that psychology and White Psychology and Rich psychology and poor 
psychology are all the same, and if they all should be or will be the same 20 
years from now as they are now, your analysis makes sense.  But, while I would 
like to think that psychology is like physics in that regard, I think I have to 
admit that it isn’t.  So, teaching everybody who comes to, say, the Harvard 
Psychology Department, the skills of  contemporary (mostly white) 
psychologists, precludes the learning not only of what non-privileged 
psychologists know, given the drift of things demographically and 
ideologically, it precludes the learning of what Psychology will be in 20 
years.   

 

I don’t know what the solution is.  Every once in a while a student in my 
evolution classes would remonstrate with me for not giving equal time to 
biblical creation theories.  I would say, in response, “Because everything I 
know tells me that they are wrong.  Furthermore, I cannot teach what I do not 
know, and I don’t know those theories.  I am not the person to be your teacher 
if that is what you want to learn.”  Now of course, that’s a pretty lame 
response, but it has the marginal benefit of being honest.  

 

But what if we knew, for sure, that the country was going to be run by Baptists 
in 20 years.  Under those conditions, wouldn’t my best response be, “I can’t; 
you’re right; I resign.” 

 

I am sure the metaphor is creepy in some way, but it’s the best I can come up 
with. 

 

Nick 

 

Nicholas Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Ethology and Psychology

Clark University

 <mailto:thompnicks...@gmail.com> thompnicks...@gmail.com

 <https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/> 
https://wordpress.clarku.edu/nthompson/

 

 

From: Friam <friam-boun...@redfish.com <mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com> > On 
Behalf Of Merle Lefkoff
Sent: Wednesday, July 29, 2020 3:02 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <friam@redfish.com 
<mailto:friam@redfish.com> >
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] "certain codes of conduct"

 

Eric, thank you for your reply.  Forgive me for suggesting a larger systemic 
problem, connected for me to the problems in our democratic system, our global 
economic system, and our international governance system--and also ultimately 
related to the existential threat of the collapse of the living systems that 
nurture our species.

 

The democracy and Constitution our founders gave us at the end of the 18th 
century has structural flaws we have tried to overcome.  The global economic 
system that the victors of WWII gave us at Bretton Woods in 1944 has similar 
structural flaws that we have also tried (not very hard) to overcome.  The 
United Nations that emerged a year later in 1945 to convene a new international 
order shares similar structural problems.  There is a pattern here. At its core 
is domination and exclusivity.

 

The present hesitant shifts in the old narratives--and relationships-- that 
created our major social, economic and political systems are the result of 
gladiators and dragon-slayers finally targeting the positive feedback loops 
that keep reinforcing historic institutional design errors.

 

I'll stop here, because I'm even boring myself. 

 

On Tue, Jul 28, 2020 at 9:49 PM Eric Charles <eric.phillip.char...@gmail.com 
<mailto:eric.phillip.char...@gmail.com> > wrote:

Nick, the "ire" is perfectly fine. I didn't need to couch my statement in that 
way, and doing so obviously opened me to Merle's response.  

 

Merle,

I think the social criticism is generally valid, but as a critique of college 
in particular it is feeds a general confusion about what college should be 
about, which ultimately speeds the fall of the system it seeks to reform. 

 

One of the obvious legitimate functions of college is indoctrination into a 
profession. If you don't want to be indoctrinated into a profession that 
college indoctrinates people into, then college probably isn't for you.  If you 
get out of college not-indoctrinated-into-a-profession, something has gone 
wrong. For example, if you want to get a degree in psychology, you need to 
learn to write in some reasonable semblance of APA style. That includes its own 
horribly arbitrary set of grammar rules, formatting and the like. It is screwed 
up, in some sense, but it isn't imperialist oppression aimed at minorities. 
Arbitrary norms are found in all professions, and conforming to them is part of 
being "professional". Also, if you got a degree in psychology, without anyone 
forcing you to learn how to approach problems, write reports, criticize 
articles, etc., in the manner that professional psychologists tend to do those 
things, something has gone wrong. If you want to think about psychology-related 
stuff in the way you already think about those things, then don't go to 
college. If you want to learn to think about them in the way the professional 
community does, then college might make senes. (Note, I'm not saying you have 
to agree with how the professional community does things, just that you should 
be able to replicate, with some reasonable accuracy, the standard professional 
approach.) Where you start from doesn't really matter; though the curricula 
should be more adaptive to the starting place of the various students, by the 
end you should be professional indoctrinated, that's the whole point. 

 

In addition, college functions to indoctrinate people into a certain part of 
society... or at least it used to. Because, traditionally, most college 
graduates don't get work in exactly the thing they studied, this "hidden 
curriculum" has often been more important than the obvious curriculum. College 
graduates should be able to read, write, and math at a certain level, generally 
think through problems at a certain level, be able to present ideas to an 
audience in spoken or written form, be able to adapt to arbitrary assignments 
with a certain level of comfort, be a team leader, be a pro-active follower, 
etc.  Here again, colleges should be more adaptive to the starting place of the 
various students, but that doesn't mean their end point should be abandoned. 
Here you see big differences between colleges, based on what they are preparing 
you for. A college like Swathmore or Bucknell is preparing you to be able to do 
those things for different audiences than Oberlin or Penn State. If you are at 
a school that is well designed to prepare you for something you don't want to 
be prepared for... that's not imperialist oppression, that's your having made 
an unfortunate choice of  where to go. 

 

Frankly, most colleges currently suck at those two goals, and most other 
functions you might want them to have.  It is easy to find studies showing that 
lots of people graduate college without high school level reading, writing, and 
math abilities. It is also easy to find students who graduate with almost no 
indoctrination into the field of study they were purportedly pursuing. 

 

Under those conditions, it is not surprising that people view a college degree 
as largely symbolic marker, required for entry into the job market or some such 
nonsense. However, the solution shouldn't be to make college degrees even less 
indicative of having attained particular skills. The less a college degree 
indicates having a certain variety of skills, the less value is provided to 
employers to select based on the presence of a degree, and the less value it 
gives a college graduate to have a degree. Returning to the indoctrination 
thing, we can see the (potential) flaw in the criticism of the curriculum. It 
doesn't make a lot of sense to say, "I really want a degree from Rutgers, 
because employers value degrees from Rutgers, but I also think Rutgers should 
change its curriculum to not be so strict in only letting people graduate if 
they actually have the skills employers value." The value of the degree, 
particularly to a person trying to get out of a bad situation, is entirely 
based on its reliably indicating some set of skills, and the ability to write 
in a semi-formal manner is one of those skills (to return to the more narrow 
original context). 

 

If you formed a solid college curriculum around mastering skills other than 
those traditionally trained in college, that would be fine (and I think that is 
what Nick is struggling to get at). And if those skills were valued 
(economically, or merely for personal growth) then a degree from that college 
would be a reliable indicator of that specific valuable achievement. But that 
is very different than allowing students to get through college with whatever 
skills they arrived with, just because you are afraid that enforcing any strict 
requirements might make you an imperialist monster. The former creates a 
marketplace for students to choose from, while the latter just guarantees that 
college degrees continue to become less and less valuable, particularly to the 
people who most seek to benefit by getting them. 





(Sorry, that ended up longer than intended.... but it's late... I don't think I 
can get it tighter right now... and your question deserves a reply.) 

 

 

On Tue, Jul 28, 2020 at 11:21 PM Merle Lefkoff <merlelefk...@gmail.com 
<mailto:merlelefk...@gmail.com> > wrote:

And why, O Eric of a deep understanding, are you not a fan?

 

On Tue, Jul 28, 2020 at 8:17 PM Merle Lefkoff <merlelefk...@gmail.com 
<mailto:merlelefk...@gmail.com> > wrote:

Clearly the implicit bias is that all of these reading requirements were 
written by White men.  In an attempt to redress this problem I have noticed 
lately that the NY Times book review seems to be bending over backwards to 
review books written by women of color.

 

 

 

On Tue, Jul 28, 2020 at 7:03 PM Frank Wimberly <wimber...@gmail.com 
<mailto:wimber...@gmail.com> > wrote:

I'm trying to remember my freshman English class.  Every other Friday we had to 
submit a five hundred word essay on the class readings. On alternate Fridays we 
had to write an in-class paragraph or two on those readings.  The readings 
included the following:

  

Catcher in the Rye by Salinger

Victory by Conrad

The Republic by Plato

All the King's Men by Warren

Brave New World by Huxley

 

Numerous essays on personal integrity by various authors.

 

I don't see that any of those had to do with unconscious racism or implicit 
bias unless the personal integrity essays did.  I think I had to read The 
Invisible Man by Ellison but that may have been in a later year in a political 
science or US history class at Berkeley.

 

All this was 54 years ago.

 

Frank

 

---
Frank C. Wimberly
140 Calle Ojo Feliz, 
Santa Fe, NM 87505

505 670-9918
Santa Fe, NM

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Merle Lefkoff, Ph.D.
Center for Emergent Diplomacy
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Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA


mobile:  (303) 859-5609
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-- 

Merle Lefkoff, Ph.D.
Center for Emergent Diplomacy
emergentdiplomacy.org <http://emergentdiplomacy.org> 

Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA


mobile:  (303) 859-5609
skype:  merle.lelfkoff2

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Merle Lefkoff, Ph.D.
Center for Emergent Diplomacy
emergentdiplomacy.org <http://emergentdiplomacy.org> 

Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA


mobile:  (303) 859-5609
skype:  merle.lelfkoff2

twitter: @Merle_Lefkoff

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