Batfort

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Tag: faculty

Unpacking Project 2021

Forgive me, but I read this story with a great deal of schadenfreude.

In five years, he said, the university wanted most of Austin’s students to be able to enroll in revamped degree programs. Project 2021, officials would later say, would incorporate state-of-the-art online classes. Redesigned curricula. An academic calendar that included short courses outside of traditional semesters. And researchers would dig into data to examine every aspect of the undergraduate academic experience — to measure what worked and adjust accordingly.

“Even the best,” Fenves said in his address, “can do better.”

Not two years later, Project 2021 was dead.

The story of the program’s rise and fall, based on more than 20 interviews and a review of emails, reports, and other documents, shows how universities too often pursue the elusive act of transformation: promising too much while investing too little. Campus leaders in Austin had used sweeping words to describe the potential of Project 2021: Futuristic. Next-generation. Bold. Higher education is “in the throes of a revolution,” one progress report read, and Project 2021 would meet those challenges.

Somewhere deep down inside, I still “believe” in education. Praxis-based knowledge and teaching is the way that our civilization has survived over centuries and built itself up to our current dizzying heights of engineering and technology.

Mainstream education does not currently ascribe that view. See Nassim Taleb, IYIs, and Soviet-Harvard Syndrome.

And yet, as someone who works within the mainstream higher education system, I see firsthand how things get done in the university. There’s a reason (or rather, REASONS) everyone within hearing distance will roll their eyes when they hear of the next new change on a college campus.

Navigating Austin’s maddening bureaucracy without much administrative experience had already proved challenging.

There is your first red flag—and that’s a major red flag. Even people who have titles like Associate Dean of Graduate Education PLUS know how to play the game well enough to get continuous federal funding for their lab (a huge deal in the sciences) PLUS high-profile consulting gigs PLUS a large amount of this ‘administrative experience’ have a difficult time getting a large change passed and off the ground.

The layers of bureaucracy in a university are deep. And if you think you’ve seen any of them as a student, you are wrong.

There are a few things that you have to have on your side to make changes in higher ed. These include, but are not limited to:

  1. The faculty. Without faculty support, or at very least, support from key faculty, nobody will actually carry out your plan.
  2. An understanding of how a university actually works.

I am unsure of how much faculty buy-in there was on Project 2021. I’d wager to guess it was largely ignored.

He envisioned a program that could be higher education’s Manhattan Project: a research team that would take on the future of learning. The group would come together, shake up campus bureaucracy, lay the foundation for long-term change, and then dissolve.

In the terms of the brilliant William Bergquist, who provided a map for the different warring cultures you’ll find in university faculty, this is a strategy favored by the “developmental” culture. Often using a consultancy model, these people (and generally identify with this) believe that change is a straightforward, rational process that be applied wherever, whenever—as long as the reasons are good.

Well, no.

People don’t like being told what to do. Especially faculty, who are the most independent of all people except, I am told, surgeons.

And the university model (Bergquist’s “collegial” culture) is built around obtaining faculty buy-in. The collegial model of governance is a series of committees on committees, who all have their favorite committee stalling tactics: the delays, the soapboxing, the subcommittees. This model of governance is built for people who don’t like being told what to do: it’s so dense that it deflects or smothers most of the people who journey into it unawares.

But anyway, enough about the faculty.

Let’s talk about money.

Charged with realizing that vision was Pennebaker and his executive team. They had a small, tucked-away office. To Pennebaker, it called to mind a bunch of FBI agents holed up in a motel room — a far cry from the university’s Star Trek sales pitch.

No matter how bad-off a university is, it will always always ALWAYS find the money to show off what it believes in. Always. Even to the detriment of the bottom line.

So if you’re in cobbled-together offices, trust me: you’re not supported by your university. You, my friend, are in the land of “We’re doing this because it sounds good, not because we actually intend to make any real changes.”

The powers-that-be within the university will find a way to show off and make their pet projects look good. Everybody else is on their own. The sooner you learn that, the easier your life will be.

(Ie, don’t expect any money and you’ll never be disappointed.)

But that leads us to my very favorite part of the article.

Early in Project 2021, Pennebaker approached the registrar with a question. What would it take, he wondered, to offer fractional-credit classes?

Such classes could make some students’ experiences more efficient. Say a student needed to take an introductory statistics course as a prerequisite for an upper-level class. Instead of delaying the advanced course by a semester, why not distill the statistics skills needed for that advanced class into a three-week, half-credit course?

The type of initiative would change the very definition of a class — a perfect fit for Project 2021.

Pennebaker quickly learned that such a change, though seemingly minute, would have far-reaching consequences. Updating student information systems cost other major research universities tens of millions of dollars each, and modernizing Texas’ aging system to handle the new classes would require a steep investment despite the various upgrades Austin had made over the years.

But it wouldn’t just take money. Making the change would touch many academic departments and staff offices, too. There could also be ramifications to federal financial aid, among other things.

This was a wake-up call for Pennebaker. Before Project 2021, he thought he understood how the university worked. He’d been a department chair for nine years, and creating the SMOC had connected him with deans’ offices and campus technology divisions. After hundreds of hours of meetings, he realized he was wrong. “I didn’t know anything about how the university functioned.”

Faculty know next-to-nothing about the inner workings of the university. Sure, they know how to enter grades online or who to tap to get a new course approved. In many senses they “run” the university by being the faces of programs and ratifying new policies.

But in terms of getting the actual work done, they don’t. Faculty usually don’t know anything about things like federal financial aid policy, or how the student information system was hard-coded back in 1992 when it was first set up, or how you actually transfer money from one service center to another without breaking any state finance laws.

Those are all the purview of staff, people whose opinions don’t count (because we don’t have PhDs) but who know everything about why courses are set up the way that they are and how to best get the Dean’s signature on short notice.

I’m not saying bureacracy is good (it’s not) but there are a million and one reasons that universities have gotten to be the way that they are. You start layering up all the regulations—for a state-funded institution, on top of federal funding, regional accreditation, Title IX issues and other “not law but everybody knows” type stuff, grants administration, IPEDS reporting—layer that on top of local traditions and norms, as well as the competing interests of research and education, graduate students and undergraduates, all with a constantly-rotating senior leadership, and…well…it’s a mess.

Without a little bit of understanding of all of those areas (and I’m sure I forgot some), you’re not going to get anywhere.

This circles around a little bit more to the thesis that I may never write, if I ever decide to go for my PhD: staff in a university are just as influential as the faculty, but they are the underwater part of the iceberg that no one ever sees.

Nobody—even the people who are actively studying the university as an organizational structure—takes into account the importance of the staff role.

I’d be willing to bet that staff have cultural biases just like the faculty, and that staff culture directly impacts the ability of faculty to get things done. I’d even say that staff cultures are compatible with faculty cultures, but not in a 1:1 way.

After all, being a staff member (aka, “having a job”) isn’t the same as having one’s identity wrapped up in having a PhD.

Anyway, there is a reason that most efforts to reform higher education fail.

Honestly, it might be a better idea just to start from scratch.

Real talk about spending in higher ed

Look. The leading edge is upon us. More small liberal arts colleges are closing each year. With Marylhurst’s abrupt closure this year, the shift to medium-sized colleges is coming sooner than I expected.

Universities are in dire straights because their organizational structure is built on soft reality while the results of their labors must be compatible with hard reality. It’s a group of people who act as if money isn’t real, who have built their whole enterprise around “go to college and get a better job” in which money is very real.

Some people get it.

When you think about how we’ve tried to solve the cost problem in higher ed, on the academic side it’s been kind of a one-note solution: bringing in more and more lower-cost labor, in the form of adjuncts. Full-time faculty have become so diluted across more sections, more courses, more curriculum, that we really are not well positioned to take care of core mission, student success, etc. The big money, ultimately, is in how much curriculum are we offering, to whom, and how.

This sounds a lot like how fiat currency devalued money, and how fiat food devalued nutrition. Fiat education ruins learning. Long term, it doesn’t work to invest in low-quality fluff when your enterprise depends on exacting, high-quality production.

We have to be able to connect core operations — teaching and learning — back to the business model. We’ve done a disservice by pretending those are two separate things. Do I make or lose money on various programs? Most institutions — the overwhelming majority — have zero idea how they earn a living, where the margins are across programs.

Because the university model is run on a “guild” system, disciplines are largely left alone to tend to themselves. I’m dealing with this at my own job right now, that the university has been more concerned that departments have certain systems in place than it is with the data collected with those systems. The faculty’s insistence for autonomy has created these giant financial structures where the head of things doesn’t actually know what happens to the money. Coupled with the fact that faculty usually aren’t that interested in money (they are the types to budget the same $3 into 3 different categories) and are more loyal to their discipline than their university, there is very little incentive for departments to keep themselves running shipshape.

Small soapbox moment: usually departments have people–administrative staff–who are adept at analyzing and deploying budgets. However, because staff are widely disregarded as functional, intelligent entities, departments do not adequately utilize their talents in a way that would make the most fiscal sense for the department.

(Trust me on this. If you do not have a PhD, your opinion is disregarded, no matter how much experience you have in fiscal, technological, or people-centered matters.)

Speaking of which,

We did a project recently for a large research university, and we were presenting the data analysis to the faculty. We put up a slide that showed one course with 12 sections. When you looked at the sections, one had 25 students, one had three, another had five, another had 10. It was really eye-opening for the faculty see that. Same course, different sections, and we have this huge variance.

There is a lot of stuff like this that could be examined in the university. This is someone who is feeling extremely underutilized in her role talking, but you could squeeze greater efficiency from someone like me by putting me on a project like that (I’ve done it before it’s on my resume hello), OR by abolishing my position and hiring someone for half my salary to do basic office work. Either one, you would win.

In the university, much of the analysis is done at a medium level. It completely ignores the impacts of decisions made by the top leadership, and assumes that all of the on-the-ground decisions made by departments are made in good faith with good fiscal sense.

None of those things are good to ignore. Starting to look into them creates a huge kerfuffle about “academic freedom.”

So you get the types of university presidents who either spend indiscriminately and are beloved by all, and then the ones who are hired to clean up the mess and whom everybody kinda hates.

That is not a recipe for growth and success. That is a recipe for driving out all of your good people and inviting narcissism and disaster.

Anyway, read the whole interview. It’s worth it.

Psychology as a fake discipline

Yet another scientific milestone is revealed as fake! This one in psychology! Boy I am shocked, I tell you. It’s one of the most famous experiments in group dynamics.

Born in the summer of 1905 and raised in İzmir province, Turkey, during the dying days of the Ottoman empire, Sherif won a place at Harvard to study psychology. But he found himself frustrated by the narrowness of the discipline, which mainly involved tedious observation of lab rats. He was drawn instead to the emerging field of social psychology, which looks at the way human behaviour is influenced by others. In particular, he became obsessed by group dynamics: how individuals band together to form cohesive units and how these units can find themselves at each other’s throats.

If you haven’t read about it before, here’s what goes happened:

Sherif’s cover story was that he was running a summer camp in Middle Grove. His plan was to bring a group of boys together, allow them to make friends, then separate them into two factions to compete for a prize. At this point, he believed, they would forget their friendships and start demonising one another. The pièce de résistance was to come at the end: Sherif planned to set a forest fire in the vicinity of the camp. Facing a shared threat, they would be forced to work as one team again.

At this point, I’m going to have to go through everything I thought I knew about psychology, figure out what was based in sound experimentation or has been adequately reproduced, and strip my understanding down to its bare bones. It’s disconcerting how much of what we think we know is based on complete lies and/or wishful thinking.

Here are some things that I do know that are reflected in the article:

Why it’s important to listen to Alex Jones

By the time of the incident with the suitcases and the ukulele, the boys had worked out that they were being manipulated. Instead of turning on each other, they helped put the tent back up and eyed their “camp counsellors” with suspicion. “Maybe you just wanted to see what our reactions would be,” one of them said.

The kids saw through the “false flags” set for them by the experimenters, and eventually turned on the camp staff. Sounds a lot like what’s going on with our dear overlords and all of the possible false flags surrounding gun control. Whether or not you like AJ, his eyes are open to the shenanigans that the elite like to pull over on us plebs and its good to be reminded of that.

Fun fact: the Rockefeller Foundation established the first two schools of public health in the US, at Johns Hopkins and Harvard.

Remove money from research and add risk

But the Rockefeller Foundation had given Sherif $38,000. In his mind, perhaps, if he came back empty-handed, he would face not just their anger but the ruin of his reputation. So, within a year, he had recruited boys for a second camp, this time in Robbers Cave state park in Oklahoma. He was determined not to repeat the mistakes of Middle Grove.

And of course, the second experiment went exactly according to plan.

The PI was ashamed to return to his granting institute without the results he had promised in the grant. The current funding structure of “science” basically incentivizes making up results before all the data is in, thus providing tremendous incentive to bias the data either consciously or unconsciously. It’s true, most grant-funded scientist have a racket going where they use their previous grant money to start research for the project that will win the next grant, because the granting agencies rarely award for grants that aren’t already viable.

There is all sorts of incentive to game the metrics and indicators in the scientific community, and very little incentive to produce true, verifiable results.

I’m sure there’s somebody doing rigorous, honest science out there. Somewhere.

Psychology is practiced by broken people

The robustness of the boy’s “civilised” values came as a blow to Sherif, making him angry enough to want to punch one of his young academic helpers.

There’s a truism that psychologists, as a whole, tend to have more mental problems than their patients. The people who self-select for psychology are looking to explain and/or treat their own issues. That opens the door to a buttload of wrong thinking, like what Vox Day is currently addressing with Jordan B Peterson’s stuff–broken people constructing working theories of the world around themselves, and then inflicting it on others.

This is also why I’m extremely wary of therapy, even though I think that talking some things through might be helpful for myself and for my gut monster. As a Christian, as a right-facing Trump supporter, I trigger all sorts of alarms in the type of person that is a therapist, and perhaps I am jumping to conclusions but I really doubt that I would get an objective standard of care if I actually revealed any of my honest innermost thoughts. I don’t want a new set of blind spots shiv’d under my fingernails while I’m trying to talk about my old blind spots.

The weird middle ground between academia and business

Confession: I haven’t followed up on Elliot Jaques. I tried, guys. I really did. It was not happening. His handbook-style writing was too managerially oriented for me, and his academic stuff…well, I’m no longer required to read academicese so I’m not going to.

That said, however, I really like his idea of how time influences levels of responsibility in job descriptions. That is, that the length of a person’s longest project determines, to some degree, the amount of competence and intelligence needed for the position. This is one of the ways you can divide the “layers” between a worker and his manager, by the length of time needed to complete a project. A worker might be dealing with daily or weekly tasks, while the manager is looking over six months, a year, or longer.

This approach makes sense, and it makes sense that the higher a person’s IQ, the more likely it is for that person to complete a long-term project. My intuition says that this dovetails perfectly with the Marshmallow Test that also correlates with success, and success correlates with IQ.

Anyway. I’m not just here to talk about management theories. Let me bring this to a point.

Lately I’ve been thinking a lot about how higher education is stuck in a no-man’s-land between “academia” and “the free market.” This idea needs more elucidation, but essentially I see a huge battle between the way that faculty view the university and the way that the administration does.

Faculty want the university to be a personalized place of free inquiry, protected from the rogue waves of the free market, where decisions are made through discussion and all the “administrative” tasks are done voluntarily, and shared.

 

However, college is now thought of not as a place of free inquiry, but a place that you go that prepares you to get a good job. There are a lot of reasons for this, and trying to tease them out made this blog post get really lopsided so I’ll ignore them for now. The point is, with this statement of purpose, colleges have “entered the game,” so to speak. They are now players in the marketplace of job seeking, of hiring and firing and all that.

Higher education has become an industry in its own right, and as such has had to build up an business infrastructure to support itself. The problem is that the way of business and the way of faculty will never, ever get along.

This clash was highlighted in two articles on The Chronicle of Higher Education today.

One, on the revolving door of Provosts (basically the VP of Education, for y’all nonacademics):

In the past decade, since I started work in a tenure-track position here, we have had eight provosts. When you subtract the interim ones, we’ve only had four. However, I think it’s more than fair to count the interims, because they last almost as long as the “permanent” ones. I wish I was kidding. Frankly, most of the interims have been better than most of the permanents — though I do have high hopes for our new “permanent” provost, who started this academic year.

Now you know why I brought up Elliot Jacques earlier. Let’s put a provost in the Stratum V category, which would have a project timespan of 5-10 years. Getting a new provost roughly every 2 years is not nearly enough time for a competent person to execute a good plan, and its an excellent smokescreen for an incompetent person to get in the position and wreak a lot of havoc.

The author details some of the specific problems of this method of management, and problems they are.

On the other side of the faculty/administration line, faculty are figuring out that they are treated like employees, not members or colleages. After counseling colleagues to be sparing with their academic service, this author also points out that

Increasingly, what used to be the purview of faculty governance has been outsourced to accrediting institutions, to state legislators, to boards of trustees, and to administrators — all groups that are, along a continuum, often far removed from the grass roots of teacher/scholars. Faculty service is increasingly academic theater that stays at the level of rehearsal and never really gets to the main stage.

While true, what is missing from this observation is that by not participating in service activities, faculty abdicate this role to the administration. Some of the administrative duties are made up, to be sure, but many of them are roles that have been coupled with the liberal arts university for decades or even centuries.

The advice given in the comments to that article is incredibly rational, but it also contributes even further to the fracturing of the university.

For any STEM tenure-track assistant professor at an R1 university, my advice is simple and blunt. Use your service hours at the regional and national level so that you get exposure for your proposals, papers and external review letters which are needed for your tenure application. After all, see what is counted – research expenditures, doctoral students, and papers/citations. So serve in your technical division in the most recognizable professional society in your field, and go through the ranks to become an officer; volunteer for panel reviews of proposals at NSF, become a reviewer for known journals and national conferences, organize and chair sessions at national conferences. Limit your service at the departmental, college and university level to departmental meetings, accreditation, and occasional adhoc committees. At the end of the day, it is your life and you are responsible for maintaining your sanity.

Now loyalties of the faculty primarily lie outside of the university (let’s not lie, they almost always did; academic discipline typically trumps university unless it’s Harvard or something) and instead of staying around for 5 years like all the revolving provosts in the first story said that they would do, you have people who will cut and run at the least provocation.

Universities have a huge problem right now. Faculty don’t want to admit that the university is now a business, but administrators also do go in and blatantly disregard traditional faculty practices in the implementation of business-type practices. This results in a lot of animosity that doesn’t help either “side.”

If this conversation doesn’t happen, rationally and out in the open, more and more universities are going to close. It’s already started, with closures and mergers, and lots of people being scared every day.

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