Skip to main content

Friday Fragments

Sometimes part of a single sentence gives the entire game away.

That happens in this piece by Ronald Kimberling, former assistant secretary for postsecondary education during the Reagan administration, on college financial aid and indirect costs. Kimberling takes the view that financial aid is an expensive boondoggle with which savvy students exploit loopholes -- like being over 24 and living at home -- to live high on the hog.

At home. In their late 20s.

It’s blinkered at best, but I was ready to shrug it off and move on until I hit the line that explained it all:

“I am not trying to resurrect the welfare queen stereotype of the past, but …”

Got it, thanks.

--

My academic background isn’t in physics, but even so, Chad Orzel’s piece “In Praise of Normal Science” made a lot of sense to me. It uses the term “normal science” in the Kuhnian sense, juxtaposing “mere plodding” with what Kuhn called paradigm shifts. Orzel makes the argument that there’s tremendous value in “normal science” on both pragmatic and epistemological levels. Pragmatically, the patient trial and error within existing assumptions is what allows conceptual breakthroughs to become actual products. Epistemologically, we don’t always know where the next breakthrough will come from. The path from breakthrough to breakthrough is cleared, in large part, by “normal” science.

It reminded me of a conversation I had with a friend in grad school. He and I were both political theorists, though with slightly different angles on it. In this conversation, we were talking about favorite writers outside the canon. He went first, naming several respected legal theorists. Mine were mostly political economists or sociologists. When I explained my choices, he commented in a vaguely disapproving tone, “That’s engineering, not science.”

He was right on the facts but wrong on the tone. I always thought that the point of theory was to inform practice. It’s not meant to be “pure.” Theory is best when tested on the ground, and practice is best when it’s informed by theory. For me, that meant moving into administration when the opportunity came along and then writing about it as I went. I’m not deriving an ideal from timeless givens; I’m trying to find fair and reasonable ways to make my corner of the existing world a little bit better than it would otherwise be. Sometimes, that involves plodding.

In practice, half measures and contradictions are simply part of the cost of doing business. One of the greatest shocks of practice was discovering how many decisions have to be made based on partial information. In the absence of perfect information, being relatively thoughtful about your own assumptions can help you decide in which direction to err. It will not prevent you from erring, because nothing can. But being able to take a step back and think about precedent setting, or likely counterarguments, or the ethical implications of a decision creates space for actual agency.

So yes, a little respect for impure practice. It’s where life happens.

--

The Girl informed me that she’s busily planning her wedding to the actor Timothee Chalamet. Apparently, it will take place on a small beach on the coast of Italy. The degree to which Mr. Chalamet will have any agency in this decision remains unclear.

Teenage celebrity crushes aren’t new, but the technology behind them is. TG and her friends can do relatively deep-dive background checks on just about anybody on a whim. Without breaking a sweat, she found that he’s fluent in French and passable in Italian, that he plays piano and guitar, and that he’s straight and apparently single. (I have not personally verified any of these.) She also pronounced him “unproblematic,” indicating no record of disrespectful treatment of women. I’m glad that she cares enough about that to check.

Details of the impending nuptials remain sketchy, given that she’s 15 and they’ve never met. Further bulletins as events warrant.

--

My thanks to everyone who expressed concerns about The Wife and her abrupt trip to the emergency room last week. I’m relieved to report that all is well, and she’s back to normal. No disrespect to the professionals in the ER, but I wouldn’t mind going many more years before having to return.

Show on Jobs site: 
Disable left side advertisement?: 
Is this diversity newsletter?: 
Is this Career Advice newsletter?: 
Advice Newsletter publication dates: 
Thursday, January 30, 2020
Diversity Newsletter publication date: 
Thursday, January 30, 2020


Udimi - Buy Solo Ads from Inside Higher Ed https://ift.tt/2GCFYr6
via IFTTT

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Author discusses book on grad school

Graduate school is a great mystery to students, and to some faculty members, says Jessica McCrory Calarco, the author of A Field Guide to Grad School: Uncovering the Hidden Curriculum (Princeton University Press). Calarco is an associate professor of sociology at Indiana University. She believes many faculty members (as well as graduate students, of course) will benefit from her book. She responded to questions via email. Q: How did you get the idea to write this book? Why did the issue speak to you? A: This book started as a tweet . Or, rather, as a series of tweets about the hidden curriculum of higher ed. Ph.D. student Kristen K. Smith had tweeted about the need to better educate undergrads about grad school opportunities, and it made me think about how opportunities in academe are often hidden from grad students, as well. Reflecting on my own experiences in grad school, I thought about the many times I'd found myself embarrassed because of what I didn't know -- the ...

Live Updates: Latest News on COVID-19 and Higher Education

Image:  Woman Charged With Faking Positive COVID-19 Test From U of Iowa   Nov. 5, 6:14 a.m. A lawyer in Colorado has been charged with faking a positive COVID-19 test from the University of Iowa to get out of a court appearance, The Gazette reported.   Emily Elizabeth Cohen was booked Tuesday on a detainer from the Boulder County Sheriff’s Office, shortly after she tweeted that the Colorado court system “just had me arrested alleging I lied about having COVID. Tweeting from cop car.”   The Boulder Daily Camera reported that Cohen is scheduled for a 10-day trial in Boulder County in Colorado starting Dec. 6 for 11 felony counts stemming from allegations she collected fees from immigrant families before losing contact with them without producing visas or work permits.   -- Scott Jaschik Judge Permits Suit Against Montana State to Go to Trial Nov. 3, 6:18 a.m. A Montana judge has ruled that a suit against Montana State University over the sh...

Bad Education: A Movie Review

"It's not having what you want," quips Roslyn Assistant Superintendent Pam Gluckin in her Long Island accent, "it's wanting what you got." And what educators got from HBO's Bad Education was a harrowing detail of a pair of school administrators gone rogue with the school district's treasury, sacking $11.2 million before they were caught... by [...] from The Educators Room https://ift.tt/3d5LaSu via IFTTT