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KVOS Special: The Professor Looks At His College

  • It's a difficult time for anyone between the ages of 18 and 21.
  • They're becoming people, and up to this point in life,
  • they've been dependent.
  • They've been children in the home of their fathers.
  • Very frequently, as with most of our students,
  • they're away from home for the first time in their lives,
  • and they're having to make decisions
  • for themselves of the sort that were normally made,
  • if not as a group, made in consultation with some one
  • other person in the family.
  • But it's a very, very hard time in life for them.
  • They're expected to become intellectually mature,
  • emotionally mature, and physically mature
  • all at the same time.
  • And the youngsters today, they come into your office,
  • they'll often come to talk to you about their classwork.
  • The professor learns at his colleagues.
  • This program was edited from four hours
  • of separate conversations, and has been
  • arranged to form a dialogue.
  • Participating are professors Katherine Carroll,
  • Charles Flora, Arthur Hicks, James MCAree, Richard Reynolds,
  • Herbert Taylor, Ralph Thompson, and Mary Watrous,
  • all of Western Washington State College in Bellingham.
  • They think that they are going through this alone,
  • that the experience is unique, that no one else has ever
  • gone through it.
  • But this would happen, of course,
  • I think, even to students, or even to young people outside
  • of a college.
  • It happens, however, without the kind of intensity
  • that is common here.
  • It is the nature, I think, of young people whose lives
  • are changing greatly under the impact of learning to feel
  • sometimes like odd men out.
  • And all too often, if you cannot understand this intellectually
  • and respond to it accordingly, you respond to it in outbursts,
  • either a good-humored prankishness.
  • Or sometimes, you respond to it in outbreaks of just plain
  • out and out violence.
  • I refuse to be very seriously alarmed about such an episode,
  • for instance, as the smashing of a piano.
  • Much as I love music and much as I admire the piano
  • as an instrument of musical expression,
  • I refuse to be very seriously disturbed
  • by this little incident.
  • It's a part of the nature, I think,
  • of young people to let off steam.
  • It has always been so.
  • As an historian, for instance, I am always
  • impressed when I am reading documents of the Middle Ages
  • at the kind of hijinks that the students went through even
  • then.
  • For instance, there is a celebrated proclamation
  • issued by the regent of the University of Paris
  • back in the 13th century in which he
  • warns that any students caught in the future playing
  • dice on the high altar of Notre Dame Cathedral
  • will be forthwith dismissed from the institution.
  • I think it's natural, because I think
  • an 18 or 20-year-old individual, a 17-year-old individual,
  • a 16-year-old individual probably one of the main things
  • they think about life is sex.
  • Now, they're unable to realize their ambitions in this regard.
  • So I think there ought to be some outlet for their energies.
  • And this is one possible outlet.
  • The value of extra curricular activities interests me.
  • Some of the students seem to think of them
  • as a means of release.
  • The college curriculum, by necessity,
  • is very well structured.
  • And yet the student activities program in itself,
  • by its very nature, is flexible.
  • For instance, within a department,
  • if a group of students are interested in pursuing,
  • let's say, a foreign language, or a particular subject
  • in biology or botany, that they can do this
  • on an extracurricular level.
  • They can go beyond what is done in the classroom.
  • These tend to attract a minority of students.
  • No, I don't think these extracurricular activities
  • actually do siphon off any great amount of energy.
  • They tend to give a forum to those students who have already
  • marked out perhaps some professional objective which
  • can be advanced by participation in student government,
  • in the newspaper.
  • I, on the other hand, I think that if they did not
  • have student government, and if they did not
  • have the newspaper, they would be most unhappy, because it's
  • traditional to have these things,
  • and they're convinced that they don't have them,
  • they're missing something that's a proper right to have.
  • But I don't think it does most of them an ounce of good.
  • Now, in the social field, I suspect
  • that social relations of college students
  • become most difficult when they have to live in group housing.
  • Many of them haven't had to live with large numbers of students
  • in dormitories or in college housing.
  • And problems of study--
  • when you have large numbers of people, the temptation
  • to socialize instead of study, if you're not
  • inclined to want to be a learner anyhow,
  • this is very attractive.
  • You can always go off someplace, and talk to somebody,
  • and have a lot of fun.
  • I tend to deplore the system that
  • presumes that each student must have a roommate or two or three
  • roommates.
  • I rather like the European system,
  • where each student has his own room and his own private place
  • to study.
  • I think we pursue group activity ad nauseum at times.
  • If a student feels that he does belong to an institution,
  • he is going to do better in his academic life
  • than if he feels he does not really fit in.
  • A dormitory can go a long way toward building this self
  • feeling that you do belong to an institution.
  • I can remember my own dormitory life,
  • and all the dormitory was for me was a place
  • to get out of as quick as I could when
  • I wanted to learn something.
  • It interfered more than it ever contributed.
  • Now, this might have been the fault
  • of the dormitory I was in.
  • It might in part have been my fault,
  • the fault of the students.
  • It might have been the fault of the college.
  • I don't know.
  • I don't think that dormitories, as I have seen them,
  • are very conducive to the learning process.
  • I think also, coffee shops are much overrated in this regard.
  • I don't think that they are very effective places in which
  • to learn.
  • If they weren't here, I don't feel
  • that they would be spending their time in the library
  • or they would be spending their time in their biology
  • or chemistry lab.
  • They probably would be sitting in a dorm, or in the lounge,
  • or on the stairways of a building,
  • and I don't think that is really detracting
  • at all from their studies.
  • I think that the coffee shop should
  • be a place where faculty as well as students comingle,
  • and that the faculty member should see in himself
  • the responsibility of using that coffee
  • shop as some kind of classroom.
  • I think it might even be wise occasionally for the faculty
  • member to prepare for that classroom,
  • and to go to the coffee shop with a particular series
  • of problems or questions in mind,
  • or even occasionally to bring something with them about which
  • he can develop some kinds of problems,
  • and then lead this discussion.
  • In that sense, I think that the coffee shop can
  • become a learning situation.
  • I don't think they normally are.
  • I think they're a waste of time.
  • I think the primary function of a college
  • is intellectual awakening.
  • We've got to awaken curiosity about the whole great big
  • wonderful world, not just the present,
  • but the past world, too.
  • The human being is a strange sort of creature.
  • At infancy, as it begins to walk, talk, and become aware
  • of the world around it, its curiosity
  • knows no limits whatever.
  • It will lead a child, an infant, into very dangerous positions
  • investigating things that catch the eye and make a blunder.
  • Now, we lose this as we grow older.
  • We accumulate a certain amount of information
  • and assume that that's all there is that we need to have,
  • that there are limits upon what we need
  • to get along in this world.
  • One of the exciting things about being a teacher
  • is to point out that the world is so infinite in variety
  • that we can make a student awaken up to the idea
  • that the whole wide world is there to be seen,
  • to be investigated as an infant would investigate
  • it, and perhaps get himself out on a dangerous limb
  • in the process, hoping, of course, you'll come back.
  • But you must go out and look at these things.
  • How do we awaken curiosity in a student?
  • Well, first place, I think the professor must surely
  • be an example.
  • He must demonstrate that he himself has curiosity.
  • He must demonstrate that he has enthusiasm for his subject.
  • And one of the ways of demonstrating
  • that you have enthusiasm for your subject
  • is to demonstrate curiosity.
  • Now, these things are important that you demonstrate them
  • as an instructor because the student is
  • to assume very surely if you don't demonstrate these things,
  • that there isn't anything in the subject worth demonstrating
  • them about.
  • For example, I could simply teach my subject
  • as a fact by fact by fact account
  • of how something happened.
  • But in reality, I have done nothing but give the student
  • a factual chronology, or a number of facts
  • strung on a chronology, like beads on a string.
  • The notion that you can package this stuff
  • as you would sardines, and knowledge is packages
  • of sardines is pure nonsense.
  • What you must do in the classroom is having presented
  • a certain number of facts, you lead the students to interpret
  • what those facts mean.
  • Indeed, it's, I think, a perfectly delightful experience
  • to lead a young person who has some factual information
  • through a logical process.
  • And suddenly, a kind of awakening,
  • and he suddenly feels, I thought of the idea
  • that those facts sum up, you see.
  • Furthermore, directly, I think you
  • can initiate some of this kind of curiosity
  • in asking questions, which I think
  • is really synonymous, by demanding this kind of activity
  • of your students.
  • You can virtually order them to be curious.
  • Not saying, be curious, now, but rather,
  • you can set up situations where it
  • is required that they come up with observations of their own,
  • and that they postulate, that they ask questions that
  • are their own, that they seek answers in ways that
  • are their own, that they postulate solutions
  • to questions that are their own.
  • You can expect this of a student.
  • I have found that when I expect this, I tend to get it.
  • And I know that further, when a student develops
  • the habit of doing this through being expected to do it,
  • it carries on.
  • It's not a one-shot enterprise that he does it here
  • and then stops it.
  • You can't turn it off that way.
  • Once you've gotten into the habit
  • of being curious about things and asking
  • why this particular worm is located at this particular spot
  • now, pretty soon it becomes an entrenched attitude
  • and will carry on.
  • But it takes more than just curiosity.
  • You can be curious without having any tools to pursue
  • the curiosity.
  • You have to go beyond curiosity to the tools, to the media,
  • to the independent study habits.
  • And it's almost a habit of pursuing an idea until you're
  • satisfied with the conclusion.
  • And if you don't do this, you can
  • be curious all your life about something
  • and never get the answer to it.
  • I think it is impossible to teach a course in biology
  • in which the qualities of curiosity
  • are awakened without their learning
  • at the same time, the more mundane aspects of biology.
  • My goodness, any discipline today,
  • and the way that the information in a discipline is building up,
  • you can't tell them everything.
  • But what you can do is teach them
  • a method whereby they analyze the materials
  • of the discipline, and then turn them loose,
  • and with any set of materials that come to hand,
  • to use that process in interpretation.
  • And it is actually awakening them to their own potential
  • to analyze and to understand the information which comes
  • to them from diverse sources.
  • Not just from libraries, but from the experience
  • of life itself.
  • The notion that the job of the professor
  • is to open up the student's head and dump
  • in a lot of information is a misconstruction
  • of the functions of teaching in [INAUDIBLE]..
  • It would be a bad teaching at any level, kindergarten
  • through graduate school.
  • The main function of the teacher knowing the materials
  • in his field is to set some structures
  • within which the student may work
  • to find new areas of knowledge for himself.
  • I do not regard myself as primarily a teacher.
  • A teacher, I take it, is charged with a much weightier
  • responsibility than mine, and that is to, in some sense,
  • induce, inveigle, force, or persuade children to learn.
  • It is my test to take a given discipline,
  • and in a series of lectures and/or seminars,
  • to present this discipline as interestingly
  • as I may and as authoritatively as I may,
  • keeping up with current literature in the field.
  • Let them learn who will.
  • Let those attend who will.
  • But those fail to learn or not attend who will.
  • I think this is an intrinsic difference between a professor
  • and a teacher.
  • It is my conviction that if the professor has
  • an enthusiasm for his subject, and not only
  • an enthusiasm for the subject, but certain rather
  • definite and positive convictions on issues
  • raised by the subject, assuming, of course, that he does not
  • try to ram those convictions down his students' throats,
  • that he will have a greater impact upon the class,
  • that they will learn more from him.
  • They will be more likely to engage in a discussion with him
  • than if he assumes a top lofty bystander's point of view,
  • as though he were utterly aloof and indifferent.
  • It's a great intellectual battlefield.
  • I like to approach my classes in biology with the idea
  • that I want to win every student in that class
  • into biological science.
  • This is the way in which I gather
  • the enthusiasm I need to properly present that course.
  • I want every one of them into that class, not just
  • the bright.
  • But I want the miserable ones, the mediocre ones,
  • and the very fine ones to enter biology as a field.
  • I don't really want this, because you
  • can imagine how unfortunate it would be if they all did this.
  • I simply want to approach it with that attitude.
  • Well, I think that if all college professors entered
  • every class with this in mind--
  • imagine it in history, in anthropology,
  • and in every discipline that a student is exposed to--
  • that when it came time that he had
  • to select a profession, that he would be in a great dilemma.
  • He would not be able to say, I want
  • to enter this discipline because Professor X was so very good.
  • Instead, what he would have to say is, gee,
  • I've had such fine instruction from so many people
  • that I had better select a discipline that
  • is more adaptable to my own interests,
  • and my own personality, and my own abilities.
  • I believe that the personality of the instructor is important.
  • There are brilliant scholars who can't teach worth a darn.
  • On the other hand, there are some teachers
  • who are not as brilliant scholars who
  • can guide, inspire, and sort of catch the student on fire.
  • And quite frankly, I think that the best teacher
  • has an obligation to try to set the student on fire,
  • to challenge his imagination, to excite him,
  • to excite his curiosity, and to lead him to something that he
  • knew not of before.
  • Professors in time come to believe
  • that they are, if not demigods, at least the vice regents
  • of the Lord on this earth.
  • And their classes come to be posed with this in mind that
  • make what goes in their truth, and much more
  • important than what goes on in the outside.
  • I suspect that most professors--
  • certainly I feel this way concerning myself--
  • are at times subject to the imperial madness.
  • In our own classroom, we are virtually all-powerful.
  • And we therefore come to believe what we say from the lecture
  • podium, rather than realizing that at best, we approximate
  • truth, that we frequently mutilate it,
  • and that in any event, we don't know
  • enough to be effective in some of the areas
  • that we purport to cover.
  • I believe that the teacher has an obligation to pursue truth
  • and to tell the student, or to show the student, put
  • the student on to, if only through books,
  • what is generally conceived to be truth
  • or to let him look at truth.
  • On the other hand, the student can
  • read much of the past in books.
  • And I think the student wants to know what the professor thinks.
  • The thing that worries me is that sometimes, the professor
  • may expound as truth what he only thinks,
  • and not let the student know that this is just
  • his own opinion.
  • I hate to see this kind of subtle indoctrination happening
  • in the classroom.
  • Well, indeed, of course, the professor
  • does have a great deal of influence.
  • He can set patterns of thought, can even by his example,
  • set patterns of behavior in his students that will last perhaps
  • a lifetime.
  • And he's got to be very careful, I think, in his relationship
  • with a student in order not to impress upon him
  • certain patterns that might not really be desirable
  • or might not be suitable to that young person.
  • He can wield a kind of Machiavellian influence,
  • too, if he wishes to.
  • And it's done.
  • It's done.
  • Yes, I think there is a danger of forming
  • a student in your own image.
  • If we can imagine a college campus
  • where there are 300 miserably poor teachers--
  • granted, this is a theoretical situation--
  • but 300 miserably poor teachers and one shining star,
  • then I think the problem is real,
  • that there will be a tendency for almost all
  • the students to try and go into the profession of the shining
  • star.
  • I think that if you have a great many very fine professors,
  • the odds of this kind of thing developing are poor.
  • But by the time the student comes to college he is--
  • and I think layman and professor are alike that we tend
  • to forget this on occasion--
  • a man or woman grown.
  • He is not easily changed in terms of moral value judgments.
  • A great deal of the ink that is spilt and anguish that
  • is poured out over professors influencing the tender
  • minds of the students ignore the fact
  • that the Boobus Americanus Collegiansus is probably
  • about as tough-minded an individual as ever come down
  • the pike normally.
  • Now, that they're not readily influenced
  • by their professors-- that much more readily,
  • they question what a professor says
  • than accept it whole cloth.
  • And certainly, this is true when the professor
  • begins making pronouncements ex cathedra concerning
  • manners, morals, mores, politics, or religion.
  • At the same time, I think we have a heavy obligation
  • to let the student know how we feel about these things.
  • If we don't, there certainly isn't anything
  • that the student can't get over in the library.
  • Are you familiar with the study which the editors of Time
  • did in publishing in the book called They Went to College?
  • No.
  • They addressed themselves to this problem in a chapter
  • on the inculcation of religious, philosophical, and political
  • attitudes and beliefs.
  • Specifically, they asked the question,
  • are college students changed in political belief
  • by the effect of going to college?
  • The editors of Time could find no conclusive evidence--
  • indeed, very little inconclusive evidence--
  • that the political beliefs of the instructors
  • influenced the child at all.
  • In fact, I think it is notorious that the Ivy League
  • colleges, the overwhelming majority of PhDs instructing
  • in the subjects are Democrats.
  • The overwhelming number of the alumni, on the other hand,
  • are Republican.
  • And it's been this way for donkeys years.
  • What it seems to me a good teacher
  • does is to teach a student to respect his own opinion,
  • but to be certain how he handles the facts as he reaches
  • that opinion.
  • Much of the teaching process-- and I think this is true of any
  • discipline, and it's a kind of truism that will apply to every
  • subject--
  • is to teach the student the facts by themselves are not
  • adequate, but that the facts as interpreted by the professor
  • are not the only adequate means of explaining
  • any particular phenomenon.
  • But that he must bring the totality of what
  • he knows to a particular topic under consideration
  • and reach mature and sound judgments of his own.
  • I think in discussions of this sort,
  • we frequently ignore the responsibility
  • of the student in the business of academe.
  • But obviously, the primary responsibility
  • for any kind of learning rests squarely upon the learner.
  • And all that any instructor can do at any level is hope to lead
  • them in a path by which they can most efficiently do this,
  • but they cannot make them learn.
  • They must do this themselves.
  • I think many students just take courses because they're there
  • to take, and they have to be taken, without reference
  • to, what am I doing now?
  • Why am I doing it?
  • What is it going to lead to?
  • And they live, in a sense, from day to day, from examination
  • to examination, from textbook chapter to textbook chapter
  • without reference to overall learning goals.
  • They have a saying in the student argot
  • that I've psyched the professor out.
  • I know what he wants.
  • He'll give it back on an examination.
  • Sometimes, college students begin
  • to inquire of each other, who is the person who
  • teaches this course from whom I'm
  • likely to get the best grade?
  • If they're swapping stories about professors,
  • as they usually do, then many times,
  • they are less interested in digging in and working
  • for themselves.
  • And they are, well, I won't say a social wrong,
  • but I'll say that they're perhaps
  • interested in taking an easier way out,
  • particularly in some of the difficult courses.
  • I think I would have to add, in justice, that frequently,
  • classes get in the way of acquiring an education.
  • A professor will require a student
  • to do rote work in the classroom when
  • the student would be better off reading books on his own hook.
  • Sometimes, I think therefore, a student
  • should rebel, particularly the very bright student.
  • Here, I might point out the haunting fact
  • that students who make the honor roll
  • are rarely the brightest students in a college
  • or university.
  • The brightest student in a college or university, ever
  • and anon decides that he will not study for a given exam.
  • He instead will read a book, or write a poem, or go for a walk,
  • with the result that he makes high B.
  • And the grind student, superior but not very
  • superior in intelligence, tends to make the A.
  • But primarily, I think with regard to study,
  • or the studies of college, his obligation
  • is to bring into the learning situation as much effort
  • as he can to learn to be self-directive in learning.
  • I think that any student coming to a college
  • is undertaking a type of contract
  • with the society that provides the college for him
  • and with the academic community to which he comes.
  • He is admitted because he's brighter than average,
  • and because he's done reasonably good work in high school.
  • It is assumed that he is here to learn.
  • I don't think we have the time, nor do we possess the police
  • powers to force him to learn.
  • Now, here we get into an interaction
  • between professorial responsibility and student
  • responsibility.
  • In many cases, we simply do not interest the bright student
  • enough to cause him to put out the maximal effort.
  • In many cases, on the other hand,
  • demands of urgent biology, the social life,
  • the desire to be a big man on campus, or what have you,
  • get in the way of acquiring an education.
  • As I look at the developments in the areas of knowledge,
  • I don't think we're going to be able in four years of college
  • to say that a person at any point in his life
  • is now an educated person.
  • You can say about him only, he has the characteristics
  • of an educated person.
  • But to say that he is now educated, no.
  • He doesn't bear the stamp of educated.
  • He bears the stamp of, he is now educating himself.
  • He has the tools to educate himself.
  • Because as knowledge expands in all areas,
  • as more is to be known, as fields are changing rapidly,
  • and as people have to be retreaded, if you will,
  • for new jobs, this becomes an ever-increasing problem
  • with our society.
  • We have to acquire facility and acquiring new knowledge.
  • And if we are not self-starters, if we are not
  • independent learners, when we get out of the public schools
  • or when we get out of college, there's no hope for many of us.
  • We'll be obsolete in 10 years, or eight years, or five years,
  • in some fields.
  • We have to keep learning.
  • The doctor has to keep learning.
  • The teacher has to keep learning.
  • The engineer has to keep learning.
  • The citizen has to keep learning.
  • There's no end to learning.
  • So we can say now about the educated man,
  • he is a man who learns, not he is a man who knows.
  • I think it was Eliot of Harvard, who in an earlier day,
  • once defined the proper process of higher education.
  • And that was to lead the students
  • through the charted fields to the edge of the unknown woods,
  • and to say, this far and no further came your fathers.
  • Now, press you on.
  • [MUSIC PLAYING]
  • (SINGING) Guarded all around by mountains
  • crowned by Baker's dome.
  • The Professor Looks at His College
  • was edited from over four hours of recorded interviews
  • with eight professors of Western Washington State College.
  • This program was produced by Al Swift and John Spalding,
  • and presented by the KVOS television
  • department of public affairs in cooperation with the college.
  • (SINGING) All hail to you.