Wednesday, June 19, 2019

News: a plea for part-timers; IVC Academic Senate support

Sociologists' Recommendations on Contingent Faculty
INSIDE HIGHER ED
By Colleen Flaherty - June 19, 2019
The American Sociological Association in a new report urges institutions to commit to “maximum feasible equity for contingent faculty.” Specific recommendations to that end include that “pay should be proportional to work done” and job offers be provided well in advance of starting dates. Contingent faculty members should be provided as much short- and long-term job security as possible, the association says, and all instructors should be eligible for and included in academic awards, professional development support, intellectual and social events, and institutional governance. Academic freedom “should be protected for all, irrespective of employment status,” the report reads.
DISSENT THE BLOG:

FOR WHAT IT'S WORTH, at the April 18, 2019,  meeting of the IVC Academic Senate, the following recommendations re "supporting Associate Faculty" were made  (by the committee on Academic Affairs) and were adopted by the Senate:
  • That associate faculty representatives have a voting representative on each of the following committees: Academic Affairs, Curriculum, Senate (two representatives), BDRPC, APTC, and IEC. Also, that these associate faculty representatives receive compensation for their committee attendance.
  • That an IVC professional development website be developed and open to access by associate faculty.
  • That associate faculty be given a web location (e.g., a web page or canvas space) for the purposes of notifications and communications.
  • That online professional development and training opportunities be offered for associate faculty in consideration of their work schedules outside IVC.
School-Specific Proposals Supporting Associate Faculty
  • That new associate faculty be provided with mentors from the ranks of full-time faculty or seasoned associate faculty.
  • That associate faculty by given shadowing opportunities for continued development of their teaching skills.
  • That the schools make available both physical and online documents to associate faculty including course outlines of record, sample syllabi, school contact information, program and course SLOs, sample assignments, and other best practice course materials.
  • That associate faculty receive regular invitations to, and agendas and minutes for, school and department meetings.
  • That each school establish an annual process of recognition and appreciation for associate faculty. 
It's not much, but something.




Monday, June 17, 2019

News: how Joe Public views higher ed; wolves; hyenas


The Public's Support for (and Doubts About) Higher Ed
(Inside Higher Ed)
Survey of likely 2020 voters shows they view colleges favorably but increasingly question whether they're delivering on promises. It also suggests a disconnect between priorities of politicians and the public.
By Doug Lederman - June 17, 2019
     …Most political speeches or media coverage would leave you with the impression that Americans believe college degrees aren't worth the money, that Democrats overwhelmingly support free college as the answer to the college affordability problem, and that Republicans don't care about holding colleges and universities (especially for-profit ones) accountable.
     Turns out none of those things are really true -- or at least that the public's true attitudes are much more nuanced than that.
     The picture that emerges from Third Way's comprehensive survey of nearly 1,400 Americans who describe themselves as likely to vote in the 2020 general election is of a public that still believes in the value of colleges and universities and their degrees and thinks the institutions must do a better job of educating students affordably and effectively.
     The survey also suggests that the public is more centered in its views about higher education than the politicians on the right and left who purport to represent them…. [continue reading]
Frozen wolf's head found in Siberia is 40,000 years old
Guardian UK
Fur, teeth and tissue largely intact on remains of animal bigger than a modern wolf

Another Brutal Fact About the Ice Age Arctic: The Hyenas
The Atlantic
As if saber-toothed cats weren’t enough.

Thursday, June 13, 2019

Riverside Community College chooses Gustavo Arellano. IVC doesn't.

Photo from Gustavo Arellano's Weekly
Loyal readers of Dissent will know that Rebel Girl has carried on a campaign stretching almost two decades now to liven up and diversify commencement with speakers who have something powerful to say to the assembled graduates and their families. She'll spare you the details but even if you have only attended say, 5 or 10 or 15 or 20 and not say like her, 27 commencements, you know to expect a certain kind of white male in a suit saying certain things. Sigh. There have been variations on this theme but invariably that is what we get. However, Rebel Girl doesn't give up and, along with others, proposes year after year nominees that better reflect the student body and their families. A reoccurring nominee is Gustavo Arellano, a O.C. born community college grad himself who has gone on to do greater and greater things and now appears regularly on the front page of the LA Times. (Check out his article in today's newspaper: Da Vinci of dirt? Road grime fuels this L.A. trucker's rolling masterpieces )

Gustavo's life story as the son of immigrants and first gen community college student plus his own power to communicate with intellect and wit has made him a popular commencement speaker. Indeed, Gustavo, has given commencements speeches across this county and region at colleges and universities inclding UCI and UCLA.

However, Gustavo's coverage as a local journalist of the Orange diocese scandal of pedophile priests and SOCCCD's former trustee Tom Fuentes' involvement in that disgrace has apparently made him persona non grata as a commencement speaker at IVC despite years of  receiving nominations and support from student, staff and faculty. Indeed, one year Rebel Girl (along with others) was told straight out at a committee meeting that the chair of the committee would not forward Arellano as a finalist even if he was nominated because she she so disapproved of how he had characterized Fuentes in his coverage of the scandal. (Fuentes worked as communication director of the Orange diocese from 1977-1989, years during which the diocese covered for pedophile priests at the expense of their child victims.)

Anyway, Gustavo is still in demand as a commencement speaker and who know, maybe one day he'll be able to speak at the little college in the orange groves, where his wife Delilah Snell is an alum.  Rebel Girl hopes so. She nominated him once again this year.

Last week at Riverside Community College Gustavo was the commencement speaker.  Here's an excerpt:
...Then, something happened that made writing this speech simple: my mother passed away in late April from ovarian cancer.
I’m at the point of my mourning process where I’m using my mom’s life to try and extrapolate lessons for myself. And I feel that all you graduates can learn something as well from my Mom, to help you in the years and decades to come.
My mother migrated to this country from Mexico in the 1960s when she was nine years old. She immediately went to work in the garlic fields of Gilroy and Hollister up in central California, before my grandparents moved down to Anaheim. She never went past ninth grade, because Mami was forced to drop out of school to help her family.
Not getting an education was something she always regretted, even as she embarked on a well-paying but tiring job as a tomato canner in Fullerton while raising four children. So she instilled in all of us kids the value of an education. Mami took us to libraries during the summer, and pushed us to join tutoring and honors programs.
All along, Mami emphasized that we strive to achieve a better career than her and my father, who was a truck driver. Not because their occupations were somehow bad or ignoble, but because the two of them had to take those hard jobs because of their lack of high school diplomas.
Her words and actions made a deep impression on us kids. All four of us got bachelor’s degrees, and three of us earned master’s. Three of us started in community college. And our example not only made her proud, but inspired Mami.
When she got laid off in 1997, she saw an opportunity. She decided to enroll at Fullerton College and go for a cosmetology degree. And after that? Maybe her own shop.
My mom jumped into the program with gusto. She paid for all the courses, textbooks, fees, equipment and such with money she had saved over the years. She made friends, read her books, and begin to experiment on us with different curls, clippers, and hair colors.
Before long, Mami began to do the hair for women and girls from her ancestral Mexican village for their weddings, quinceañeras, and other special occasions. I always remember her happy and proud of what she was achieving— finally, she was getting the education she always wanted.
And she was doing it at a community college.
This is the part of the story where I’m supposed to tell you she got her degree and lived happily ever after. But it didn’t turn out that way....

From Arellano's LA Times' article: "I get one last Lent with my Mami. I'm using it to learn our family's capirotada recipe"
To read the rest (and you should) to hear how it all turned out, click here - and while you're there, sign up for Gustavo's weekly newsletter. It's one of the few emails that Rebel Girl gets (and she gets a lot) that she reads in its entirety every week. 

Coda: Throughout the years Rebel Girl has been told to her face that Gustavo and all the others she nominates (the UCR prof of lit, a Muslim woman who was a Pulitzer Prize finalist; the Vietnamese born gay mayor of Garden Grove; the local female Muslim  journalist,  etc. etc.) are all too political and that the men (mostly) in suits, mostly white, are not. Somehow these traditional choices transcend politics via success and privilege even though, as Rebel Girl sees it, there is little that is more political than a man in a suit telling her and her students how to live their lives. Somehow being female, being brown, being Muslim, being gay is too political. Too bad.


*
see also

Friday, June 7, 2019

Friday night blues


     One of my favorite bluesman is the mysterious King Solomon Hill, likely named after a church in Louisiana but born in Mississippi. He recorded a handful of songs in 1932.
     "Gone Dead Train" is perhaps his most famous song. (See lyric below.)
     It now seems likely that his real name was Joe Holmes, who was born in 1897 and died in 1940 or 1947. It is likely that he associated with Sam Collins and Blind Lemon Jefferson.

King Solomon Hill Baptist Church, Yellow Pine, Louisiana


THE GONE DEAD TRAIN

And I'm goin' Winden* — Lord, I'm gonna try to leave here today
Tell 'em I believe I'll find my [way?] — And that train is just that way 

Gotta go on that train — I said I'd even broke my [jaw?]
Boys, if you out and runnin' around in this world — this train will wreck your mind 
   (Spoken: Your life, too) 

Lord, I once was a hobo — I crossed a [many point?]** 
But I decided I'd go down for a fast life — And take it as it comes 
   (Spoken: I reckon' you know the fireman and the engineer would, too) 

There are so many people — have gone down today 
And this fast train Northern Southern — traveling [light and clear?] 

Oooo-ooh — I wanna ride your train 
I said, "Look here, engineer — can I ride your train?" 
He said, "Look here, you oughta know this train ain't mine — and you're asking me in vain" 

Said, "You go to the Western Union — you might get a chance" 
   (Spoken: I didn't know the Western Union run no train) 
Said, "You go to the Western Union — you might get a chance" 
You might go wire to some of your people — and your fare will be sent right here 
  (Spoken: I thought that's the way it is) 

I wanna go home — and that train is done gone dead 
I wanna go — that train is done gone dead 
I done lost my wife and my three little children — and my mother's sick in bed 

Oooo-ooh please — help me win my fare 
'Cause I'm a travelin' man — boys I can't stay there 

*It's likely that Hill meant to sing "Minden," the name of a town with which he was associated
**"Point" is a railroad term


From Barrelhouse Words: a blues dialect dictionary

Thursday, June 6, 2019

Reorganizing Away the Liberal Arts


Reorganizing Away the Liberal Arts
(Inside Higher Ed)
     Nationwide, faculty members are fearful of liberal arts programs dwindling away as many colleges and universities shift spending to programs that are seen as linked directly to careers. At the University of Tulsa, some faculty members say their fears are being realized with major alterations and cuts to the university’s academic programs…. (Continue reading)

SOCCCD's Student Information System implements AB 1266



Today, faculty and staff received notice that the district's Student Information System had adjusted its protocols to be in compliance with AB 1266, the "School Success and Opportunity Act" which was signed into law by Governor Jerry Brown in 2013 and has been in effect since January 1, 2014.

As a result MySite will now only display students' preferred names (if selected), in lieu of their legal names. All names will be classified under "student name." This will extend to Canvas, Sherpa and other areas. Faculty can check out their rosters for the fall now to see the changes - which are pretty much unnoticeable, which is as it should be. The option for "preferred name" is now vanished.  There is only one: student name.

This is a very welcome change, especially for our trans students.

To understand why AB  matters so much, check out this two minute testimony by 16-year-old Ashton Lee, given in front of the Senate Education Committee in  October 2013.






Wednesday, June 5, 2019

Saddleback alum wins State Senate seat: Lena Gonzalez!



LA Times:
In two California Senate special elections, Gonzalez wins, Dahle is the apparent winner
Long Beach Press-Telegram:
Democrat Lena Gonzalez defeats Republican Jack Guerrero in south LA County race for state Senate
Gonzalez, one of two children of a Mexico-born mother and U.S.-born father, went to Saddleback College and Long Beach State and earned an MBA from Loyola Marymount while serving on the Long Beach City Council. She is a corporate-affairs manager for Microsoft, overseeing its L.A. philanthropic portfolio. Her campaign emphasized environmental cleanup, support for public schools, affordable housing and tenant protections, and expanding access to health care.


*

Tuesday, June 4, 2019

Meanwhile...."hundreds of rounds of .22 caliber ammunition, a shovel and a sleeping bag" in Irvine. Plus a kill list.


In the news today:

L.A. Times
Anti-Semitic plot included ‘kill lists’ and targeted houses of worship, O.C. man admits
An Irvine man who had “kill lists” of prominent Jewish figures pleaded guilty Friday to charges related to an anti-Semitic plot against three congregations in Orange County. Nicholas Wesley Rose, 28, was convicted on one felony count of carrying a loaded firearm that was not registered to him and three misdemeanor counts of violation of civil rights in connection with threats against two churches and a synagogue in Orange County because of their ties to the Jewish community....
 O.C. Weekly: 
WOULD-BE JEW KILLER GUILTY OF FIREARM VIOLATION, CHURCH THREATS

A search of Rose’s Irvine apartment produced anti-Jewish literature and a journal full of white supremacist and anti-Jewish writings by the resident, including a list of steps titled “Killing My First Jew” and a “Kill List” that included Jewish community members, including well-known people in the entertainment industry...Investigators also found Rose web searches of white supremacy ideology, anti-Semitism and the effective range of a silenced .22 long range rifle. In his car, police found hundreds of rounds of .22 caliber ammunition, a shovel and a sleeping bag.

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...