Monday, November 15, 2010

The professionals! (Just Gimme Some Truth)

     NOV. 15: Just after 5:00 today, we at Irvine Valley College received the following email, announcing the temporary replacement of Kathleen Schrader, the Dean of Math, Science, and Engineering, who was recently fired (then unfired, then placed on administrative leave):
Colleagues:

     Please join me in welcoming Bill Kelly, who will serve as IVC’s Acting Dean of Mathematics, Science, and Engineering through June 30, 2011. Bill previously served as Dean of IVC’s Math and Science Division from July 2004-to 2007. Bill brings extensive community college experience throughout the state, [comma splice!] he served as Dean of Fine Arts, Physical Education-Athletics at Saddleback College from July 2000-July 2001. From 1989-1995, Bill was Vice Chancellor for Administrative Services for the South Orange County Community College District. Bill earned a Bachelor of Science and Master of Arts from Pepperdine University. Please join me in welcoming Bill’s return to IVC.

Very Respectfully,
Glenn R. Roquemore, Ph.D.
President
Irvine Valley College
     President Roquemore, who ascended to administrative ranks back in 1997 owing to his sudden willingness to work with the hated Raghu P. Mathur 
(until then, Roquemore had worked with administration to remove Mathur as chair of his School; the nakedly ambitious Mathur had used unscrupulous means to retain that position, one that the equally nakedly ambitious Roquemore desperately coveted), 
--as I was saying, President Roquemore called Schrader to his office a couple of weeks ago to call her on the carpet over her alleged unprofessionalism as evidenced by some of her instructors’ banter, during a Biological Sciences meeting, regarding Mrs. Roquemore’s planned cake-baking (or cake-buying) efforts for the opening of the new Chemistry buildings. (Kiana is an IVC chem instructor.)

     (I'm told that Schrader was very clear about the object of Roquemore's consternation in conversations she had with friends in the immediate aftermath of her untimely "firing.")


     PLAN B: No doubt after a session with “legal” (or HR) at the district, Roquemore developed a new sense of what occurred during his meeting with Schrader: no, he did not meet with Schrader about snarky faculty comments about Kiana’s cake; it had nothing to do with that! (don’t be silly! Glenn has always scrupulously treated his wife as just another instructor!*); it was, he said, about an alleged offensive remark made during the same meeting about classified employees: something about the shallow end of the gene pool. (Efforts to hear this comment on a tape recording of the meeting have yielded no evidence that classified employees were the target of the “gene pool” remark. Faculty who were at the meeting continue to scratch their heads over what about the meeting could be construed as evidence of Schrader's unprofessionalism--unless it's Glenn's notorious customary unprofessionalism and kneejerkery re Kiana.)

     Before Kelly accepted this acting dean position, the job had already been offered to someone else—a respected member of faculty. She took time to think it over. When she returned to accept the offer, she was then told, “Well, no, we gave it to someone else.”
     The professionals!

*I've spoken to some highly reliable people at IVC who swear that Glenn has--well, let's just say that they report numerous and amazing incidents of a kind that Glenn seems to say have never occurred! Some of these people are talkin'. And not just to me

A totally unnecessary update: Prendergast still on top

Typical voter
THOMAS "T.J." PRENDERGAST
114,933 - 50.90%

KEVIN M. MULDOON
110,878 - 49.10%

Further evidence that things are winding down: few votes counted since yesterday (only 230 ballots; see). So I think they're just pickin' up stray ballots out in the parking lot, in workers' hair, and under the seats. Meanwhile, Prendergast maintains a 4000+ lead. So it's over, dude.

Naked people and shared governance

U.S. Senator Intervenes on Behalf of College Student Facing Deportation (Chronicle of Higher Education)

U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein has asked immigration authorities to halt deportation proceedings against a City College of San Francisco nursing student while she considers introducing a private bill that would allow him to stay in the country temporarily, the San Francisco Chronicle reported. The 20-year-old student, Shing Ma (Steve) Li, was arrested in September and is being held at a detention center in Arizona, pending deportation to Peru. His parents had immigrated to that country from China before bringing him to the United States at age 11, but he has no relatives or friends in Peru, he says. His parents, meanwhile, face deportation to China. Senator Feinstein, a California Democrat, is a supporter of proposed legislation known as the Dream Act, which would create a path to citizenship for undocumented students.

Naked Rampage in the Library (Inside Higher Ed)

A freshman has been charged with simple assaults and indecent exposure after knocking more than 1,000 books off the shelves of a library at North Carolina State University, while naked, last week, The News & Observer reported. Several students filmed the incident….

Nearly Naked Photo Shoot in the Library (Inside Higher Ed)

Many students and others at Brooklyn Law School are angry over a photo shoot by the fashion line Diesel in the library, The New York Post reported. The law school expected tasteful photos of people in an environment of books and learning, but found instead near naked models rubbing themselves against each other and various parts of the library….

Rallying for Shared Governance (Inside Higher Ed)

     A few years ago, organizers at the American Association of University Professors had to cancel a conference on shared governance for lack of interest. This year, they gave it another shot and were pleasantly surprised, to say the least: applications flooded in and they ultimately had to turn people away.
     The AAUP conference served as a rallying point for 250 academics concerned about the state of shared governance at their institutions. They took charge at a Washington hotel this weekend, sharing war stories, exchanging advice and – of course – taking a few jabs at administrators.
     "I don't believe all administrators are our enemies," AAUP President Cary Nelson said in his opening address, after repeatedly mocking "administrative wastes" and sending the audience into fits of laughter, "just some of them." Nelson bemoaned some of the worst violations of shared governance: plans at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champagn, where he teaches, to slash humanities funding; and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute's move to strip its faculty senate of power. "It's time to stand up for the values the AAUP articulated 100 years ago," Nelson said. "They are now under unique assault."
     Attendees found solidarity among others who are fed up with similar experiences. A common theme of the workshops and panels was the loss of faculty consultation during financial crises, with panelists drawing on their institutions' experiences to offer advice and strategies to preserve shared governance….

The Morning Matinee: "Excellence Without Money"

via Roxie's World:



"Sarcasm is not helpful to your cause."

*

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...