I fear I am about to get myself into trouble with a compendium to my latest
reflection on what students need. It's about what so many faculty need. Perhaps,
desperately need. Why trouble? It's because while so many of us academics are so quick
to talk about students, we are so hesitant, to say the least, to talk about themselves.
Nevertheless, here goes.
After a month, I still have a "Lily hangover." I guess it's because Lily-South
was my first outing, since my cerebral hemorrahage, reminding me "gratio ergo sum," that
is--if my Latin is correct--loosely, "I am thankful, therefore I am." That is, how
grateful I am for each breath I still take. Anyway, being a Lily old timer, a professor
e-mailed me asking, why I talk so much about the Lily conferences and what was the one
thing that stands out most from my years of engaging in the national and regional Lily
conferences on college and university teaching that makes them stand out. I've been
pondering an answer for days. Actually, there are two things that stand out. The first
is the creation of an uplifting and empowering environment for information, affirmation,
education, and especially for edification that is the beauty of the Lily regional and main
conferences. Over the years, they have done so much for me. Magically and miraculously,
there's no need for entry signs to read, "No egos allowed." Uplifting is the name of one
Lily game. Nourishment is the name of another Lily game. At these gatherings, you can
see all around you, whether in formal sessions or schmoozing in the halls or talking
around the meal tables, in the early morning and late into the night, the people offering
positive support and encouragement for each other to engage themselves as strangers
quickly become colleagues and friends.
At Lily so many people feel it's a safe place to let their guard down a bit,
momentarily come out from behind their pretenses, and let their inner selfs briefly rise
to the surface. So few of these often surprisingly open and honesty after-session,
over-the-table conversations center around classroom teaching methods and techniques.
And, those which did, were always peppered with such hesitating and even fearful
utterances "Oh, I'd be scared to death to try that" or "I don't have the confidence for
that" or "Oh, I couldn't do that" or "They wouldn't let me" or "I don't have tenure" or
"I'm too shy" or "That's not me" or "I have a family" or "I'd die" or "I don't believe" or
"Do you know that they would say?" All this brings me to the second thing about Lily. I
had had a quick, few seconds exchange with Stewart Ross of Minnesota State at this past
Lily-South conference during a plenary presentation by Ed Neal of UNC. I whispered to
Stewart, "A lot of what he's saying is so spiritual."
Stewart quickly replied, "Maybe people need spirituality to fill the vacuum."
I've been thinking ever since about that comment and some things said by Todd
Zakrajsek of Central Michigan during his presentation on classroom apathy and motivation,
as well as by Bill Johnson during his presentation on dreaming. It's the heretical
thought that we academics are just as human, just as fallible, just as suffering the sling
and arrows of outrageous fortune, as the students. So many academics come to Lily looking
for methods and techniques and technologies, and so many find, often to their amazement,
that they want something more. They're seeking something beyond themselves because
they're feeling forced to settle for something that is less than themselves as they get
caught up in the trappings of assessment, accreditation, tenure, research, publication,
promotion, and a host of other academic rites that give at best lip-service to classroom
teaching. The "got to" chase for academic recognition and security seems to instill so
little joy in so many of them. It's like, as it is said in Ecclesiastes, chasing the
wind. In conversation after conversation, people whispered, almost as if they were afraid
others would hear them, that they have a "clone-ish" feeling, that they are losing that
war e.e.cummings described against others who are fighting to make them into people those
others want them to be.
Empty and meaningless institutional mission statements aside, in often fearful
resignation that embodied Thoreau"s "quiet desperation," they sighed that they are void of
an inner happiness and serenity, that they are being "forced" to compromise themselves,
that they're looking over their shoulder when they enter the classroom, that they really
did not want or want to do what the academic tradition and values were dictating to them
what to want and to do, that they really didn't want to focus on what the academic world
was spotlighting, that the quest for the demanded generic academic achievement of degrees,
tenure, and promotion--and even mandatory scholarship--did not really bring very much
lasting fulfillment, that in reality most institutions aren't as open minded as their
mission statements state and are too often inhospitable to those who challenge old ways of
thinking and doing things, that the stress has made them impatient with students--and
others, that the pursuit of those off-the-shelf achievements and recognitions left so many
of them hopelessly frustrated and/or even fearful. There was a realization that standard
definitions of academic accomplishment that satisfied recruitment committees, tenure and
promotion committees, administrators, as well as accrediting agencies, were not truly all
that personally satisfying.
I have heard so many people say in so many words that even if they successfully
had struggled academically to survive, they really didn't know what they had survived for
other than a guarantee of a job, a title, a salary level, a publication, a bit of
reputation. So many people realized that though they may have acquired the means to live
academically, they lacked a meaning to live for. In many ways, they are reflective of
what was reported by PBS' in its indicting "Declining By Degrees": life without living,
means without meaning, having while having not, being owned without owning. They
forlornly revealed that inner vacuum they themselves had created by surrendering their
selfs and their responsibility, often at the expense of students, with blaming accusation
that the devilish "system made me do it." And, perhaps worst of all, they sadly and
haplessly had convinced themselves that they could not do anything about it.
Vision! Difference! Integrity! Purpose! Meaning! That's what so many who
attend Lily, and those who don't, find themselves looking for. They have a yearning for a
clear personal vision, an almost desperate hunger for meaning, an inner burning desire to
make a difference, a thirst for authenticity, and a search for a connection with a real,
meaningful purpose that would yield joy, excitement, satisfaction, and fulfillment.
Make it a good day.
--Louis--
Louis Schmier http://therandomthoughts.edublogs.org/
Department of History http://www.newforums.com/Auth_L_Schmier.asp
Valdosta State University www. halcyon.com/arborhts/louis.html
Valdosta, Georgia 31698 /\ /\ /\ /\
(229-333-5947) /^\\/ \/ \ /\/\__/\ \/\
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/\"If you want to climb mountains,\ /\
_ / \ don't practice on mole hills" -
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