Open thread – Academic Blogs a Problem?
There is a bit of a controversy about blogs by academics, especially if they are not yet tenured or are looking for a position (like myself).
When a colleague warned me against blogging, I did a little bit of research and found that a full-scale conversation was already under way. It began with an article in the Chronicle of Higher Education by anti-blogger “Ivan Tribble” – “Bloggers Need Not Apply.”
That’s when the committee took a look at their online activity. In some cases, a Google search of the candidate’s name turned up his or her blog. Other candidates told us about their Web site, even making sure we had the URL so we wouldn’t fail to find it. In one case, a candidate had mentioned it in the cover letter. We felt compelled to follow up in each of those instances, and it turned out to be every bit as eye-opening as a train wreck.
Wait, they “took a look at their online activity”?
If the blog was a negative factor, it was one of many that killed a candidate’s chances. More often that not, however, the blog was a negative, and job seekers need to eliminate as many negatives as possible.
See also “Too Much Information” by Scott Jaschik.
Responses and counterarguments (i.e., the trouble with Tribbles):
Henry Farrell, “The Blogosphere as a Carnival of Ideas”
More Tribble, More Troubles, The Little Professor
Me and Professor Tribble, Mark Grimsley
And, if you’re really into it, check here.
The whole debate has given me pause. On the one hand, I think that this blog is appropriate about respecting privacy and the rights of others. On the other hand, perhaps my political and religious viewpoints could hurt me if I am being considered for a job. I’m not comfortable about hiding my views in some kind of secretive way (as though something was wrong with having had experiences and developed individual opinions). What would be the point of my pretending not to exist in those dimensions?
I do understand that once you are hired, you do represent the university as a whole in some way. Obviously there isn’t much call for a discussion on current events in a class on, say, Emily Dickinson. However, personal views outside the classroom shouldn’t really matter. If the intellectuals who still survive (and even thrive, some of them) in the academic world cannot speak their minds on topics of the day in the public sphere, then what is the point of higher education at all?
For as long as I can remember, there has always been a certain pressure for deferment of expression. You can’t say anything until you’ve gotten into graduate school. You can’t say anything until you’ve defended your proposal. You can’t say anything until you’ve gotten the degree. I don’t agree. I think you should say anything that you can argue, anything that you can defend. Aren’t the sacrifices of going on with education enough? Isn’t one of the very goals of higher education to train citizens to think, to evaluate, to reason, and to speak up for their perspective and position in the public realm?
I took a middle path. I’ve taken my name off the blog – not that it’s so difficult to find out my name, but at least I’m not shining headlights out there. Blog entries are not the same thing as published articles. The ease and immediacy of self-publication does encourage a certain informality, but that is part of its appeal. Still, perhaps I could raise the tone somewhat, in ways that might be refreshing to me as well.
This is an open thread. What are your views of the pros and cons of blogging by (non-tenured?) academics?
5 thoughts on “Open thread – Academic Blogs a Problem?”
I would hope that no one would hold this blog or any blog against you when you are being considered for a job. Though I don’t always agree with your views all you do is express your views and they haven’t been out of line as far as I am concerned.
No one should have it held against them unless they are slandering some one in a post and in that case then they can be held accountable.
People will always find a reason to take someone down, that´s for a job, a course, a degree and so on. Academics aren´t so open-minded like we think. I work at a university where everything we say can be used against us. Or better, sometimes you don´t need even to say a word; just a way of looking at someone else is enough reason for people to be punished. It´s sometimes so tiring to keep a policy view on everything we say or think.
Once, someone said I felt pleasure on being ironic and I just made clear that there´s several ways of saying what we wish to say. The person replied ‘Of course. You are a linguist!’
I don´t fear to say what I need to say, but to get so tired of the profession I always loved in my life by the impossibility of expressing myself.
When I was a child I hated school, but loved learning. Hi-school was particularly awful! I had the bad habit of doing my own research on topics I was interested in. That peculiar habit darn near ended my Hi-school career. One day our American history professor said, “The United States had never broken a treaty (The context was a comparison between the US and Russia, with Russia playing the role of “the evil empire.) Anyway, up popped my 16 year old hand and I said,” What about the treaties with the Indians.” My rather irritated teacher replied,” I am sure that the president and the congress have always done what is right for the people of the United States, including the American Indians!”
I am not sure what I said next, but it involved telling the teacher that he wasn’t fit to teach. I was sent home and told I was not to return until I had apologized to the teacher in writing. I refused and that was the end of my formal learning for 25 years.
I did get into University as a mature student and did fairly well (B+ average) but quickly learned that the professors preferred it, if I sprouted their words back to them. A graduate student told me that one was not to express ones own thoughts or use the first person in an essay until one was in graduate school. Since I was older than 99% of the students (including graduate students) I ignored his advice.
It seems to me that part of the dumbing down of America, is tied to the sad fact that critical thinking, individual research, and self-expression is not encouraged in the school system. Its like the system (academic, corporate, and political) prefers conformity over creativity, and yes men over independent thinkers.
Please keep up your blogging, don’t trade your capacity to think for a job.
Thanks for the comments. Jon, I particularly appreciate yours. Since we are in disagreement on politics, it means even more.
Rosei – Don’t let anyone at your university get you down or keep you from speaking. Remember that what counts are the three keys of research/writing, teaching, and service. Whatever the internal quarrels are, if you focus on what you produce in those areas, you will move along. What fun is literature without language play? Remember the students who honored you, and be confident in your worth and consequence.
Elaine – I can only imagine the expression on your high school teacher’s face. I hope that the school was reacting to the strident form of the delivery rather than the content (which seems accurate). While there are professors who prefer to hear validation that what they have tried to teach has been absorbed more than they prefer evidence of independent thinking, I haven’t run into too many of these (I can think of two). Most of my professors have put the emphasis on learning how to think, how to rally evidence to suport an argument, learning what counts as evidence, and so on.
That graduate student was dead wrong, and what a horrible thing to say to someone! However, the form of the essay does force you to compose the strongest possible argument, not just state an unsupported opinion. I’ve run into students who simply hadn’t had any significant training in thinking or argumentation. A professor would be remiss if they didn’t give any instruction that improves upon simply saying whether or not they liked a story or character, reducing a text to a kind of Aesop’s fable (and the moral is…), or simply narrating free-form associations that the fiction brought up for them personally (that reminds me of the episode of Friends where…). It is very rewarding from the perspective of a teacher when a student “gets it” and is empowered to create an interesting interpretation of a text and to argue for it in a persuasive way.
I think you are right that the tools of interpretation, critical thinking, and compelling presentation have been degraded, but they are not completely gone. I tend to think that our system divides people up in terms of who will be encouraged to think, interpret, and present – and who is meant to be a sort of unreflective worker bee. Still, it is up to each person to decide the extent to which she or he will choose to think independently, whether or not that is particularly rewarded.
A dumbed-down America is easier to control, but it is no advantage to us to be ignorant in the increasingly competitive world marketplace.
Oh, and don’t worry, I would never trade my intellectual nature for anything at all. Even “mommy-brain” didn’t derail it for long.
Dear VirusHead,
Once again I have to bow to your insight and intelligent expression. I do have a tendency to express myself rather strongly, and passionately (I’m one of those INEP types) 😉 Nevertheless, while the scholastic forum often does encourage “interpretation, critical thinking” and rhetoric (compelling presentation), I don’t think the economic and political forums do.
I’ve observed a number of highly educated people falling into the trap of their respective organization’s culture. This IMNSHO accounts for quite a number of disastrous decisions, flawed plans, and a dearth of whistle blowers in political, bureaucratic, and business circles.
Regarding thinking, I suspect ‘real’ thinking is a lot rarer than is commonly assumed. I know how difficult it is to break out of the automatic response mode, which many people confuse with thinking. It is even more difficult when one is working hard, and going as fast as possible.
But that is something for another discussion.
Take Care and Good Luck Job Hunting.