Rough Theory

Theory In The Rough

Category Archives: Teaching

Inconvenient Facts

My reading group has been working its way through Wittgenstein – first the Tractatus and now Philosophical Investigations. Along the way, we’re also reading some contemporaneous works chosen, according to our somewhat random collective mood, to cast the core text into relief.

Last week, I suggested looking at Weber’s “Science as a Vocation” – in the theory that the distinction Weber draws between the rationality of means, and the irrationality of ends, might share at least some aesthetic similarities with the Tractatus, with its distinction between the scientific propositions of which we can speak (but not as philosophers), and the metaphysical, about which we cannot speak, and therefore must be silent… I make no claim that my idiosyncratic association from Wittgenstein to Weber has any merit (Wittgenstein still being, for me, something about which I cannot intelligently speak, and whereof I therefore really must be silent…). I did enjoy, though, revisiting Weber’s text, not least because I had actually forgotten how directly Weber speaks to some of my recent dilemmas about teaching and research.

While I could engage with Weber’s text on many levels, two dimensions of his work resonate particularly strongly for me at the moment.

The first is Weber’s analysis of the academic in the role of a researcher, and the relation Weber draws between academic analysis and the commitment to the existence of a disenchanted world. Weber’s text is nuanced: he explicitly refuses to judge those who sincerely continue to believe in mystical forces, but he argues that, when entering into a specifically academic role, recourse to spiritual explanations is no longer available. Academic explanations operate within the framework of a disenchanted world, else they cease to be academic.

The second is Weber’s analysis of the academic in the role of a teacher. Weber argues passionately for explicit political advocacy – but not in the lecture hall. Significantly, Weber draws attention to the structural imbalance between faculty and students: “To the prophet and the demagogue, it is said: ‘Go your ways out into the streets and speak openly to the world’, that is, speak where criticism is possible. In the lecture-room we stand opposite our audience, and it has to remain silent.” Academic teaching operates within an intrinsic structural imbalance, thus creating an ethical obligation to refrain from political advocacy.

Weber also notes the same significant criticisms that would be posed to both of these positions today: that academic ends, in their own way, fall outside the scope of rational enquiry; and that, in practice, it is impossible to insulate students from the political opinions of the professor. I suspect that addressing these objections systematically would require a move beyond Weber’s sober theoretical pessimism. Still, Weber offers a vision of a distinctive character – a unique quality – of the academic vocation that I find personally compelling. He expresses this vision in specific relation to our role as teachers, but I would argue that it also applies, self-reflexively, to our role as researchers. Weber argues:

The primary task of a useful teacher is to teach his students to recognize ‘inconvenient’ facts – I mean facts that are inconvenient for their party opinions. And for every party opinion there are facts that are extremely inconvenient, for my own opinion no less than for others. I believe the teacher accomplishes more than a mere intellectual task if he compels his audience to accustom itself to the existence of such facts. I would be so immodest as even to apply the expression ‘moral achievement’, though perhaps that may sound too grandiose for something that should go without saying.

I find myself drawn to this description of what distinguishes academic work from other social roles: the unique importance of confronting – in others, certainly, but especially and primarily in ourselves – the existence and implications of inconvenient facts. I conceptualise the university as an institution committed to this ideal. And I agree with Weber’s assessment that this kind of work can represent a “moral achievement”. Whether I personally match up to this ideal, whether any specific university ever does, are perhaps inconvenient facts of their own… Such empirical shortcomings, however, would surely be worse, if the ideal itself were jettisoned.

For That, You Get a Gold Star!

I just sat down to my current stack of grading, and realised that my son must have found it some time yesterday. On one of the assignments – one that, as it happened, had received a high distinction – he has placed the sticker of a large gold star.

On (Not) Saying No

I have to apologise for neglecting the blog a bit the past couple of weeks: I’ve somehow found myself in the position of assisting with a grant application, writing a conference paper, preparing to teach three courses – and, oh yes, there’s still that pesky matter of field research… We won’t mention small things like deciding that I really needed to put together a reading group on analytic and continental philosophy, or assisting with the recruitment of another PhD student for our project (know any good transport planners anyone)…

Things will calm down slightly in early August, when at least the grant application and the conference paper will be off my plate, and my very small part in the PhD recruitment process will have concluded. My field research will continue to be quite intense for the next several months, and the teaching load is quite heavy this term – although I will only be teaching into, rather than coordinating or designing, these courses, so in that respect the demands will be lower than normal.

My courses for the coming term are: an undergraduate “common course architecture” course called “Economics for the Social Sciences”, which is designed to introduce first-year undergraduates to basic economic concepts, as well as provide a general socialisation to academic work; the Research Strategies course that I also covered last term; and a postgraduate edition of the History and Theory of planning course that I taught to fourth-year undergraduates last term – although, this time around, I’ll be teaching someone else’s version of the course, rather than the version I designed. Read more of this post

Cheating Successfully

I used to consult for schools and social service organisations that were struggling to manage programs for children with behavioural problems. One of my favourite memories from that time is of a parent who approached me after I had given a talk, described the numerous times her teenage son had been caught in possession of drugs on school grounds, and then confessed, “To be honest, I don’t know whether to be angrier at how often he violates the rules, or at how stupid he is about it: I mean, come on, how difficult can it be not to get caught?!”

I always remember this conversation when I catch students cheating – the ham-handedness of the effort is sometimes as affronting than the cheating itself: I find myself wondering what it was about me, exactly, that made someone think I would fall for *that*… I’m quite sure, of course, that there are plenty of “successful” plagiarisers and cheats whom I don’t catch: there are always a few suspicious assignments where I decide to give students the benefit of the doubt, and I’m sure there are others that don’t set off any alarms for me. But the particularly brazen and reckless ones always get to me…

I noticed today that Savage Minds’ oneman has written a post on teaching cheating, and also cited a piece by Alex Halavais that provides recommendations for those who would like to “cheat good”. I recommend that any students contemplating cheating in my courses read these works, and take their advice to heart – at least then, if you get caught, I won’t be torn over whether to be disappointed by the cheating, or just exasperated by how easy it was to catch…

Some Unintended Consequences of Demographic Change

My favourite quotation this term from a student essay:

The great post war economic boom had a positive effect on economic activity as population sizes increased, creating demand for the need to understand German theorists.

You know you’ve been talking about Habermas too much, when your students start drawing conclusions like this…

Eggcorns of Planning Wisdom

Readers of the delightful Language Log blog will be familiar with their periodic posts on “eggcorns” – the often poetic alternative words and phrases that sometimes result when someone hears a new term, but has never seen it written – like the spelling “eggcorn” for “acorn”.

The teaching environment is primed for eggcorn production, since students are bombarded with new terms in lectures and discussion. Since eggcorns often provide far more insight than “canonical” spellings into how students interpret terms, they can also be useful (if inadvertent) feedback for the instructor.

I unfortunately neglected to make a note of some fantastic (but now, sadly, forgotten) eggcorns from earlier in the term, but have collected a few from the final set of papers for the term.

My particular favourite is “physical list planning” (in place of the “physicalist planning” so often criticised during the term). I love the association it gives of planners blindly applying some list of rules and regulations to the planning process – a proceduralism that was also often criticised in the course, but has here apparently been assimilated to the slightly different critique of planners who focus primarily on the physical environment.

Honourable mentions go to:

“falls sense of security” – I love this reinterpretation, which shifts the emphasis of the phrase from the state of overconfidence, to the sinking sensation that might strike, once one realises that one previously suffered from a “false sense of security”…

“high and sight” – I liked this one for its metaphorical spatialisation of what is normally a temporal phrase – thanks to our heightened elevation, we can now see so much more clearly…

Things I Shouldn’t Read While Grading…

Placebo Defect

I’ve been invited to design a very rough draft for a course on Science and Public Policy over the next couple of weeks. It would be an elective course and, since the course won’t have been offered previously at this university, it is uncertain which students would attend – it might attract students from the sciences who would like to learn more about communicating to policy makers, or students from the social sciences and humanities who would like to learn more about science, or some combination of the two.

I’m looking forward to designing the course, and would appreciate any suggestions for topics and/or readings appropriate to undergraduate students in their second year or higher.

While I’m thinking about popular perceptions of science, I wanted to pass along this anecdote, from an Australian morning TV show – Channel Ten’s 9 a.m. with David and Kim.

The show was discussing the recent British clinical trial of TGN1412, an immunomodulator developed by TeGenero. The trial, organised by PAREXEL, recruited eight volunteers, of whom six received TGN1412, while the remaining two received a placebo. Although the drug had appeared safe in animal trials, including primate trials, all who received TGN1412 during the human trial rapidly became critically ill. The incident has sparked an intensive review of this clinical trial, as well as questions about the protocols for human clinical trials more generally.

On 23 March, Dr. David Ritchie had been invited to explain the trial to the morning show audience. After hearing Dr. Ritchie’s breakdown of the trial, host David Reyne was apparently confused why, given the life-threatening reactions experienced by six trial participants, the two participants who had received the placebo fared so well. As ABC’s MediaWatch reports:

David Reyne: Some of these guys were given a placebo.

Dr. David Ritchie: Correct

David Reyne: I don’t really understand what a placebo is, but it seems to have, to have saved them! And wouldn’t it make sense that every time a trial like this takes place, that there’s a placebo on hand.

@” Channel 10, 9am with David and Kim, 23rd March, 2006, quoted by MediaWatch

Dr. Ritchie does eventually set things right – you can check the transcript or the video to see how.

Bloggership Symposium

Orin Kerr, from the group legal blog The Volokh Conspiracy, has drawn attention to a symposium on the relationship of blogging to legal scholarship, at the Harvard Law School’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society. It may just be selection bias, since I regularly read a number of legal blogs, but it seems to me that blogging is closer to becoming “mainstream” in legal scholarship than it is in most other academic fields – perhaps because the medium suits discussion and debate over legal precedent and the pooling of “distributed intelligence”, and therefore offers a logical fit with the legal field. Regardless, legal scholars often seem more comfortable with the notion that blogging can represent a potential tool for their professional work, rather than simply a distraction from it – expressing an understanding of the relationship of blogging to academic work that I expect to become widespread through many academic fields over time.

I haven’t had time to read most of the papers, but I have read Eugene Volokh’s contribution, which is also mentioned in Volokh’s post at The Volokh Conspiracy. Titled “Scholarship, Blogging and Trade-offs: On Discovering, Disseminating, and Doing”, the paper discusses the conflict academic bloggers often feel between spending time writing a post for their blog, and spending time on other, more traditional, forms of academic work.

As the title suggests, Volokh breaks academic work down into the categories of discovering new information, disseminating ideas discovered by oneself and others, and doing tasks that aim to transform your discpline or broader society. He then analyses the ways in which blogging can contribute to each of these traditional academic roles, and evaluates the ways in which blogging can provide a more or less effective strategy than more conventional forms of academic work. The article offers particularly interesting discussions of the communal aspect of blogging – the value of receiving feedback from a group of people who gather around your blog – and of what Volokh calls “micro-discoveries” (what I would refer to as the “distributed intelligence” dimension of blogging), in which blogs can become mediums for many people to draw attention to easily-overlooked, but widely-distributed, phenomena that might otherwise escape notice and reflection.

Michael Wesch at Savage Minds

I just wanted to draw attention to the fantastic material being posted at Savage Minds by guest blogger Michael Wesch.

Michael has written several posts about a fantastic, semester-long World Simulation project that he uses to lead students to discover interesting and relevant questions about the interactions of material environment, culture, and historical contingencies in the historical development of the contemporary world.

For those who find the World Simulation concept daunting, he has also posted a very handy tip about replacing linear PowerPoint presentations with a more non-linear and adaptable lecture web created with DreamWeaver.

I’d personally love to adapt the World Simulation project for a future course, and the “lecture web” concept is also very good – although my students will long ago have realised that incorporating audio visual materials into my classroom is not (yet?) a personal strength… ;-P

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started