Once again, my alma mater is doing something dumb – assed.
Yale has decided to become more diverse, and as you can imagine, manufactured diversity always ends up looking ugly. The university will spend $50 million over 5 years to hire. . . ten visiting professors.
For those who are not in academia: the title of Visiting Professor sounds cool but all it means is that a scholar is expected to uproot her or his entire life every single year to flit from one part of the country to another without any hope of a real job.
I have met a professor, for instance, who is Native American and who has already helped half a dozen universities (including mine) to meet their diversity requirement by hiring her for such a position. What this sort of professional instability does to her life and her scholarship interests no one. The woman is simply passed around from one school to another as some sort of a token that allows a bunch of bureaucrats at every one of these schools to tick off a diversity box in a report and forget all about it.
All of this turns out to be quite harmful to the scholars who happen to be black, Native American, or visibly disabled* because they end up being dragged around like exhibits in a show of fake diversity.
Real diversity, of course, can only be created by doing the exact opposite.
* These are the identity categories that are currently in demand by bureaucrats.
One suggestion for real diversity: credits from Yale should be offered to students at the Gateway community college, and vice-versa.
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Sounds like a great idea. I’d be all for that.
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So are you saying these should be tenure-line positions instead of visiting professorships?
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There is no tenure track at Yale.
And I don’t think there should be.
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Why not??
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People who graduate with a PhD in this country are often in their late twenties (sometimes, early thirties) and have only taken a handful of courses in their research discipline. Trying to predict which one of these budding scholars will actually end up producing scholarship that is significant enough to place one at Yale (or Harvard, or Princeton) is a waste of time.
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My own alma mater has gone a step further and has online a form you can fill out if a student or professor says something that isn’t politically correct and sent it to the office of diversity to squeal on them. You know the place, Clarissa, they advertise themselves as the Harvard of the Midwest.
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“a form you can fill out if a student or professor says something that isn’t politically correct and sent it to the office of diversity to squeal on them”
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Dumb question: What’s the difference between a visiting professor and an adjunct professor? The contract length?
One year is basically a blink for complex jobs. If this is to benefit students, it can’t help anyone who actually develops a working relationship with the professor, because in a year, the professor has moved on.
Does it really cost $1 million to hire a professor for a year? How much of that is just search committees and publicity? It doesn’t make sense when we keep hearing stories of professors living in garrets, dying of consumption and eating freegan dumpster food at the Chronicle (exaggeration).
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These are not dumb questions. The system is complex and confusing.
“What’s the difference between a visiting professor and an adjunct professor?”
“If this is to benefit students, it can’t help anyone who actually develops a working relationship with the professor, because in a year, the professor has moved on.”
“Does it really cost $1 million to hire a professor for a year?”
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P.S. And a search committee costs nothing. People do the work for free.
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Someone needs to find a way of taking the profit motive out of destroying society.
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“For those who are not in academia: the title of Visiting Professor sounds cool but all it means is that a scholar is expected to uproot her or his entire life every single year to flit from one part of the country to another without any hope of a real job.”
A Visiting Professor, as I understand the term, is someone who already has a tenured job at one university who is spending a year or two at a different institution.
What you are describing sounds more like a Visiting Assistant Professor position. In my department, a Visiting Assistant Professor position is for two years, with possible renewal for a third year.
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