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Editor’s Note: Sean P. Murphy, the author of this
essay, is teaching ENG 474 “Teaching Literature” in winter
quarter. He is professor of English and humanities at the
College of Lake County, in Illinois, and he was instrumental
in helping DePaul establish its Certificate in Teaching
English at Two-Year Colleges program. This essay, which
appeared in the October 20 edition of the journal Inside
Higher Education, is adapted from his introduction
to Academic Cultures: Professional Preparation and the
Teaching Life, published by the Modern Language Association.
Professor Murphy’s essay is essential reading for those
of you contemplating a career in college teaching.
Promoting the Culture of
Teaching
By Sean P. Murphy
Lily Tomlin famously quipped, “The trouble with the rat
race is that even if you win, you’re still a rat.” While
I am loath to think of myself or some colleagues in rodent
terms, success (or winning), as popularly understood within
the professoriate, exacts a price from those in the race,
“winners” and “losers.”
For better or for worse, the goal of the graduate school
race, winning a tenure-track assistant professorship at
a certain type of college or university, frames the pre-professional
experience of most students of English and foreign languages.
What graduate programs boast in scholarly training, however,
they often lack in institutional training — that is, in
guiding future faculty members to see and experience positively
the variety of professional identities rooted in diverse
academic cultures, specifically the cultures of teaching-intensive
colleges.
New Ph.D.’s in tenure-track positions at teaching-intensive
colleges and universities rather unfairly have to learn
on the job the role of assistant professor at institutions
whose cultures do not mirror those of the Ph.D.-granting
universities they just left. Once the elation of securing
a tenure-track appointment subsides, the same fortunate
minority who emerge from the job crisis having won the race
now cope with a second job crisis, one involving the cross-sector
transition from research-intensive to teaching-intensive
institutions.
The year I completed my doctorate, fall turned to spring,
the job market turned from four- to two-year colleges, and
I turned into a community college professor, one with few
strategies at the ready to brook the physical and emotional
toll of a 5/5 teaching load as well as a 2- to 3-course
summer load. The word “graceful” does not come to mind when
I think of my personal cross-sector transition from graduate
school’s paradigm of reflection and knowledge production
to my community college’s standard of commotion and spirited
knowledge transmission, all in a microcosm, the College
of Lake County in Illinois, of a macrocosm in which 12 percent
of full-time faculty hold doctorates.
As a minority in terms of degree attainment, the impulse
to bring the best of my doctoral education to a community
college inspired several projects: an internship program
to bring graduate students to our campus before they entered
the job market, thereby getting a sense of at least one
community college’s day-to-day life; specially designed
themed composition courses that moved away from traditional
rhetoric to more current theoretical orientations, social-epistemic
chief among them; and, perhaps most important to initiating
a national dialogue about academic cultures, a collection
of essays from foreign language and English Ph.D.’s.
Intuitively knowing I was not the only faculty member struggling
to bring humanistic intellectual ideals to a teaching-intensive
college, I wanted to read of other Ph.D.’s who became successful
public intellectuals in academic settings that, generally
speaking, neither afforded them the time nor resources to
articulate their stories, to publish accounts of their transformation
from “scholar” to “teacher-scholar.”
Thus was Academic Cultures: Professional Preparation and
the Teaching Life born. A collection of essays from faculty
who have built rewarding careers at teaching-intensive colleges
and universities, Academic Cultures creates a space for
faculty who often remain silent in academe once they leave
graduate school — again, for lack of time and resources.
To be sure, as the job crisis in English and foreign languages
continues, we need detailed narratives from people who have
adapted their doctoral habits of mind to the needs of schools
ranging from tribal colleges, to border colleges, to comprehensive
colleges, to non-elite religiously-affiliated colleges,
to high schools.
Just as Ph.D.-granting departments depend upon faculty
members to design curricula that will meet the needs of
graduate students, so do all departments, whether they grant
A.A.’s, B.A.’s, M.A.’s, or certificates. Aeron Haynie, a
Victorianist at the University of Wisconsin at Green Bay,
a comprehensive university, asks in an essay an important
question of professors: “Shall we devote more concern to
ensuring that students read certain authors ... or to developing
their skills in critical thinking, reading, and writing?”
The same question can be asked of professors across higher
education, whether humanists or scientists. Haynie concludes
that “our profession needs to clarify what we teach and
how it might be useful to a larger public that exists in
the varied cultural contexts in which colleges themselves
reside.” To clarify connections between the humanities and
real communities, our profession needs to hear the voices
of humanists practicing in all sectors of higher education,
especially those colleges and universities with greater
ties to the community, with a greater need for public intellectuals.
The K–12 system already links theory to practice, the humanities
to communities, because primary and secondary schools are
integral parts of the communities they serve. Colleges of
Education and state regulations mandate the student teaching
experience, in which candidates learn first-hand how to
apply knowledge to the classroom, all the while enjoying
the benefits of mentors, meetings, and college classes devoted
to supporting students as they navigate the choppy waters
of taking the lead in a classroom.
Ph.D.’s in secondary schools can take the lead in translating
the language of advanced study in a discipline to praxis,
as Stephen da Silva does at a private high school in Texas,
where he taps into a mainspring of positive challenges.
“When I began teaching high school,” Da Silva comments in
his essay, “I rather arrogantly imagined that I was regressing.
Instead, I have entered a profession that demands that I
grow.” Although we do not expect high school faculty members
to produce conventional research, the broad community of
Ph.D.’s, scholars all, need not accept the silence of those
who are busy with large class loads, large class sizes,
and community activism. The political stakes are too high.
As past director of the Writing Center at Concordia University
of Oregon, Lynnell Edwards makes literal da Silva’s growth
metaphor in the title and content of her essay “Grow Where
You’re Planted.” She candidly articulates both the nourishment
offered by an evangelical institution’s call to community
as well as the deprivation that comes from wondering “more
than once whether I keep this position simply because it
is a full-time job, something more and more scarce in the
humanities, or because the work I am doing here matters
at some level beyond my own intellectual and professional
satisfaction.” Grappling with the dissonance between the
institution’s values and her life’s work remains a paradox
that Edwards finds vitalizing. “Ultimately, having had to
reckon with the dilemma is what gives meaning to the life.”
Others find work in contexts with more harmony between
their personal beliefs and professional practice. Keene
State College professor Mark C. Long, for example, acknowledges
those, like himself, who “have managed to make satisfying
professional lives in less than ideal circumstances by setting
aside the conventional narrative of the profession.” That
conventional narrative, shaped as it is by expectations
of moving from the position of a student at one Ph.D.-granting
department to the position of an assistant professor at
another Ph.D.-granting department, excludes faculty members
who consider it their good fortune to have traveled between
and among diverse academic cultures.
How can we broaden notions of career success beyond the
hierarchical Carnegie classification system of colleges
and universities, research-intensive or not, to include
considerations of the social impact of an institution, of
the extent to which a work life fulfills professors, or
of the match between the talents of Ph.D.’s and the needs
of certain college, university, and/or community constituents?
Indeed, narrow definitions of career success limit professors’
self-definitions and their potential as public intellectuals.
Humanists have devoted too little attention to the relations
among the profession, higher education, and society. As
Vladimir Lenin noted, “One cannot live in society and be
free from society.” Demands from external stakeholders for
accountability in the professoriate make active teacher-scholars
a necessity for the future of the humanities.
Time and again I find colleagues like Robert Chierico,
Fabiola Fernández Salek, Evelyne Norris, and Virginia
Shen, who demonstrate to Ph.D.’s the meaning of accountability:
teaching, service, research, and public outreach. They live
in society, creating innovative undergraduate foreign language
programs at Chicago State University for an urban student
body consisting of “more women than men, many part-time
students who work full-time, many students from low-income
backgrounds, and a good number of returning students.” Echoing
the themes of professors as change agents, of colleges as
fundamental elements of communities, this team of professors
works toward enabling student success by “delivering a high
school–to–college transition program for minority students,
providing special Spanish courses for native speakers, ensuring
a strong study-abroad program, and offering a complete range
of foreign language [courses], including ... Chinese and
Arabic.”
As future faculty members prepare for the job market and
as their professors who know best the rigors of research-intensive
careers consider the market into which they are sending
students, I hope they regard diversity in postsecondary
education as a strength of the system rather than a problem
to redress. Discussions with future English and foreign
language faculty should include all the academic cultures
in which professors establish gratifying careers. Listening
to practitioners from teaching-intensive academic cultures
(tribal colleges, community colleges of all sorts, art schools,
baccalaureate colleges, and master’s colleges and universities)
unsettles the provincialism of professors inhabiting different
academic cultures, exposing them to a rigor unknown within
the doctoral department.
My intended audience for Academic Cultures — graduate faculty,
doctoral program directors, and graduate students — will
find expressed in the essays of this anthology the unifying
foundational ideals of higher education, albeit with different
context-dependent definitions: teaching, service, and scholarship.
While unity expressed in diversity is noble, change in graduate
education is nobler.
Research is important, as is the dissertation. Teaching
fellowships and assistantships serve graduate students well,
on balance. But a physician would not dream of practicing
medicine after having spent time in one medical school and
one portion of the medical system. Much can be said for
rotations, and doctoral candidates might do well to follow
the medical school model by teaching at a range of institutions
during their course of study. Graduate coordinators or directors
can facilitate partnerships with local colleges and high
schools, which would entail giving up some graduate student
labor but gaining intellectual breadth.
If faculty members and administrators from different sectors
of higher education communicated more systematically across
academic borders to express distinctive features of their
institutions, we might progress toward Ernest L. Boyer’s
goal of “diversity with dignity in American higher education,”
thus affirming the various ways Ph.D.’s express their intellectual
leadership within their careers and, of great consequence
to the public intellectual, to their students and home communities.
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