Graduate Education in Classics: A Continuing Conversation....
Classics as a Way of Life: Acculturating the Aspiring Classicist
March 18, 1995
University of Pennsylvania
Contents
Opening Statement of Matthew Santirocco, NYU
(summary)
Matthew Santirocco identified four aspects of acculturaton or
socialization that are being discussed not just in the field of
classics, but across the academy. He called these the
intellectual, pedagogical, communitarian, and professional
aspects. He offered brief illustrations of each. Intellectual
acculturation is the process of becoming by learning the ways of
a specific discipline. One particular vehicle for this sort of
acculturation is the graduate proseminar. Pedagogical
acculturation is ideally an important part of intellectual
acculturation. The relationship between the two needs to be
stressed and fostered, especially as graduate students begin to
teach classe of their own. Acculturation into the academic
community involves making aspiring professionals aware of the
place that their research and teaching activities fit into and
shape projects that involve many different parts of their own
and other institutions. One area in which communitarian activity
is important is in the design of core curricula or similar
initiatives that extend beyond, but should still involve, the
research and teaching missions of an individual discipline.
Finally, students need to be made aware of what constitutes
professional behavior in other areas. Examples were cited
(without names) of inapproriate complaints filed with the APA
Committee on Professional Matters by recent PhDs who had not
been made aware as graduate students of what behavior would
expected of them as professionals or of what behavior they had a
right to expect from others in matters involving job searches,
paper submissions, et alia.
Opening Statement of Susan G. Cole, SUNY
Buffalo (summary)
Susan Cole spoke to the issue of the graduate student life and
how it has changed over the years, and the fear that "the
survival of our profession depends on circumstances beyondour
control." Her main point was that, while the process of
"acculturation" implies an unequal relationship between two
groups, one of which needs to be reformed on the model of the
other, graduate students in the past enjoyed a culture of their
own that sustained them during their arduous professional
training; but the social conditions under which today's graduate
students work has changed for the worse, and appears likely to
worsen still. She contrasted the situation of the sixties
particularly at large, public universities, where programs and
funding were large and plentiful enough to allow graduate
students to feel not unduly deprived and to enjoy a rich
intellectual and social life among themselves. This situation
was an important counterbalance to the relatively authoritarian
style of the many immigrant professors then to be found in many
American departments. The straitened circumstances of the
contemporary academy have put more pressure on graduate students
and inhibited the formation of sustaining communities; it is
therefore up to the faculty to do more than their predecessors
to create supportive environments. Models can be found in
teaching cooperatives, in mentoring models that share
responsibility among several professors instead of concentrating
authority in the person of the thesis director, and in helping
students to develop professional survival skills such as
networking. She also spoke more specifically to the issues of
curricular design and, especially, to the experience that her
own department had in redesigning its proseminar, which has gone
from being a series of introductory lectures on various
subdiscipines to being more issues- and discussion-oriented. For
example, the reading list now includes the APA's statement on
professional ethics and responsibility. She expressed an
interest in discussing these matters further with individuals or
groups and in hearing about the experience of others.
Opening Statement of Judith P. Hallett,
University of Maryland (summary; a full
text is also available)
Judy Hallett discussed the nature of the
relationship
between teachers and students. She proposed a model of "parenting" both
for its connotations of nurturing and cooperation and to make
the point that sexual relationships between teachers and
students are inappropriate and unprofessional. Like Susan Cole,
she stressed the idea that mentoring graduate students and
postdoctoral students should not be the job of a single,
authoritarian figure, the thesis director, but should involve
others, possibly even in routine formal arrangements extending
beyond the walls of any single institution. She noted that most
graduate students will not find employment at institutions like
the one that granted their degrees, and that working
relationships with faculty at other types of institutions
would prove beneficial to their professional development. They
should also be encouraged to develop the habit of developing
these relationships on their own. In general, she advocated
taking a more deliberate approach to introducing graduate
students to the various dimensions of professional activity, and
not simply reducing graduate education to a process of
transferring research skills.
General Open Discussion (summary)
Several people expressed discomfort with the notion of the
"great man" who anchored a department, directed many
dissertations, and seemed to control virtually all aspects of
their students' lives. It was generally agreed that the
temperament of most faculty today is much less authoritarian;
also that less general ageeement about what constitutes
"classics" as a discipline or field has rendered the traditional
proseminar something of a problem. It was noted that Penn's
version of this course, normally taught by G. N. Knauer until
his retirement, had not been taught since, but had not been
replaced by anything, either, and both students and faculty had
begun to feel the need for an updated course that would
introduce incoming students to the profession.
Matthew Santirocco noted that several metaphors for the
teacher/student relationship had been proposed, including
mentoring, parenting, sisterhood, and communitarian models. He
suggested exploring some of their implications. Bridget
Murnaghan expressed approval of the idea that the relationship
should involve both nurturing and advocacy on the part of the
teacher toward the student, but expressed discomfort with the
"parenting" metaphor, partly on the grounds that college and
graduate school already seem artificially to prolong adolescence
beyond reasonable limits. Kurt Raaflaub expressed sympathy with
an expanded notion of what programs should do to introduce
students to their discipline beyond inculcating research skills,
but found in some of the previous discussion too much emphasis
on the issue of sexual harrassment. Irad Malkin opined that this
is an issue about which American academics are too sensitive;
Israel, where he works, and in Europe, where many of his
colleagues were trained, it is taken for granted that students
and teachers will form romantic attachments, and in such an
atmosphere few problems occur.
Matthew Santirocco voiced concern over Susan Cole's idea that
"the survival of our profession depends on circumstances beyond
our control"; but he offered some evidence to illustrate the
problems that universities face. In terms of resource
allocation, he said, the typical university's portfolio of
businesses (in order of the sizeof its investment in each), (1)
health care delivery (2) real estate management (3) operation of
parking facilities (4) athletics, etc. Undergraduate education
comes in at #29! These observations led to some hand-wringing
over the defensive posture in which universities today typically
find themselves. Kurt Raaflaub brought this thread of the
discussion back to the main theme by observing that programs
have a responsibility to make sure that graduate students
understand these pressures and the effect they have now and are
likely to have in the future on the way professors do their
work. He mentioned some strategies tried at Brown, such as
informal lunches at which a faculty member would discuss his or
her work with the students and try to explain why they did what
they did, the choices they had made in their careers, the
contribution they hoped thay were making by their work, and so
on. He also noted that more attention must be paid to the
postgraduate years, when young faculty need time to continue
developing their research and pedagogical skills, to become
acclimated to a new collegeor university, and so forth. Not only
are these years important for these reasons, but it has to be
recognized that professional development does not end with the
conferral of the PhD.
The end of conversation turned to measures that organizations
like the APA might take to help these discussions move towards
concrete recommendations and implementations. Some of the
advantages and disadvantages of APA involvement were discussed.
Several participants felt that the new five-year colloquium
format might prove useful for carrying out this work. Members of
the Committee on Professional Matters and the Education
Committee suggested that these entities ought to be proactively
involved in addressing many of the questions raised by the day's
discussion. Some participants worried about the dfficulty of
attempting to reach a productive outcome under APA auspices.
The meeting was adjourned.