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Facing the Freshmen -- II

May 19, 2011

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Last fall I confessed to readers of Inside Higher Ed that, although I’d never previously taught freshmen, I’d signed up to offer a First Year Seminar (FYS) at the University of Richmond, where I serve as provost. Now that the academic year is over and I’ve finished my foray into freshman seminar teaching, I offer a few reflections.

I drew on my previous academic career teaching law and graduate students at another university and decided to offer an FYS entitled "Working: An Examination of the Legal, Economic and Social Aspects of the Nine to Five World." My first concern was if any students would sign up for the class. To my delight, all 16 slots filled up on the first day of registration. Then I wondered if that quick response was a consequence of the inherently attractive course topic and title, or was it that the class was scheduled from 3–4:15 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays, when even the sleepiest of freshmen would be up and ready to go to class?

As it turned out, the students were indeed interested in the topic of working. We began the first class with a discussion of the jobs they had held in high school, which represented a surprising range of positions: lifeguard, hospital emergency room aide, fashion model, babysitter, salesperson (lots of salespeople!), camp counselor, and waitress. We spent our first week exploring the legal foundations of the employment relationship and the harsh realities of the employment at will rule, and then we launched into the semester’s readings and topics.

We read five books, a half-dozen articles, three U.S. Supreme Courts cases, and a case study, all tied to the American workplace. I’m pleased to report that the students did the reading. They came to class prepared and ready to discuss what they had read. Even more satisfying, they sent me newspaper articles that related to the topics we’d discussed in class. For example, when I assigned the seminal 1968 Supreme Court decision Pickering v. Board of Education, which established the free speech right of public employees, one of my students e-mailed me a clipping from her hometown newspaper describing a local teacher who had been fired for blogging about her school principal. Needless to say, class discussion that day was enriched by the comparison of the two circumstances, occurring 43 years apart yet presenting the same issues of justice, fairness, and expectations of loyalty in the workplace.

The students loved Ben Hamper’s Rivethead, which they found authentic, profane, and rich with humor. They were somewhat troubled by Barbara Ehrenreich’s Nickel and Dimed, not so much for the working conditions she described as for the reality that as a writer posing as a low-wage worker she could choose to leave those abysmal conditions at any time. Reading three Supreme Court opinions was a challenge, but the students persisted through the unfamiliar language of concurring opinions and marathon footnotes. Other well-received books included Gig and Nobodies, both by John Bowe.

Writing assignments varied from single-page exercises written in class to a 10-page research paper. The variation in my students’ writing ability was striking. Some wrote beautifully, regularly employing topic sentences, descriptive adjectives, effective transitions, and properly-attributed quotes, all in grammatically correct sentences. Others wrote paragraphs that rivaled Faulkner in length and complexity (but alas, not in depth). Punctuation conventions were many and varied, and sometimes mystifying (why does that semicolon appear here?). I used the old-fashioned technique of correcting papers with a red pen, often rewriting entire paragraphs to show what I was looking for. The good news is that my students’ writing improved over the semester. The not-surprising news is that my students will need to have continuous writing assignments across the curriculum throughout their college careers if they are to graduate as skilled writers.

What surprised me the most was the vast divide between the world I knew and the one my students brought to the classroom. Stated simply, our cultural references were miles apart. Granted, I’m 40 years older than they are, so I expected a certain level of generational difference; after all, I had stopped making references to bands in class many years ago when I realized no one else in the room had ever heard of the Grateful Dead.

An example: when we came across a reference in Gig to the fiery conflagration in Waco, I stopped and asked “Do any of you know what the author is talking about when he refers to Waco?” They solemnly shook their heads. “The Branch Davidians? David Koresh?” I continued. Nope. My students have no knowledge of that event, nor of Timothy McVeigh’s subsequent bombing of the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City. They did remember 9/11, although they were only 8 years old when it happened.

Another time, while discussing a brief history of union organizing attempts in the South, I asked if any of them had ever seen a textile mill – or indeed a mill of any kind. Not a one answered yes. I suppose I should not have been surprised, but as someone who grew up in North Carolina, where two of my aunts spent their entire working lives in the mills, I was a bit taken aback.

The killer was when one of my students was describing the plush setting at a software startup company she had visited, complete with pool tables and a Wii — and she suddenly stopped in embarrassment and asked if I knew what a Wii was. Although my head was in my hands, I assured her that I did indeed know about Wii.

What pleased me the most was the skill my students showed in making class presentations at the end of the semester. All were adroit with PowerPoint, many using embedded videos and creative graphics to underscore their main ideas. Some were nervous, and some hesitated when their classmates or I asked follow-up questions, but they did well. They were comfortable with technology and, more importantly, they were comfortable speaking before the class. Lest you think my praise is limited to their communication skills, the substance of their presentations was impressive as well; in fact, one student’s presentation on the economic effects of the Family and Medical Leave Act was as sophisticated as any presentation my former graduate students might have made.

So will I do this again? Emphatically, yes! After a nine-year absence from the classroom, I was exhilarated by the give and take of class discussion (including one lively 30-minute exchange on whether or not the profession of bookmaker should be legalized), the occasional flashes of insight in some papers, and the bond I formed with my students over the course of the semester. I have to admit that even after grading seven sets of papers, evaluating 16 presentations, and leading four months of discussions, I was sad to see the semester end. I’ll revise my syllabus, drop a couple of reading assignments and add a few others, give some more thought to the number and type of writing assignments I should require, and fearlessly face a new class of freshmen next year!

Steve Allred is provost and vice president for academic affairs at the University of Richmond.

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Comments on Facing the Freshmen -- II

  • Upgrade!
  • Posted by Ashleigh , Assistant Director, Career Center at William and Mary on May 19, 2011 at 8:45am EDT
  • Steve,

    As a 2005 graduate of UR, I enjoyed your description of teaching an FYS. When I attended UR, our FYS courses were called CORE, and were not subject based. Everyone read a set of books each semester, across every FYS, and teachers from all departments participated. While I credit CORE with teaching me how to write at the college level, I would have enjoyed a course based on a particular subject of interest (and potentially, of my choosing), rather than jumping through 6-8 books over the course of a semester. I am happy to see the University has moved in this direction.

    I have to wonder, though. These are first year students we're talking about. The picture you paint is very rosy. Were there not also frustrations stemming from generational differences, apart from incongruous cultural references? These Spiders sound too perfect...
  • Interesting piece
  • Posted by SeeEmBee on May 19, 2011 at 9:45am EDT
  • As a provost myself (who has taught a lot of first-year students, but in the past), I appreciated this article a lot - I also appreciate a colleague who gets into the classroom. As a historian, I am troubled by the notion that if a student did not personally live through an event, s/he doesn't know about it. The Grateful Dead and David Koresh seem, to me, to be part of American culture and not having personally experienced them should not mean students have not heard of them.
  • Decision Context
  • Posted by Willie , Emeritus at UF on May 19, 2011 at 10:30am EDT
  • I worry that freshmen know nothing of the Branch Davidians or of the bombing in Oklahoma City. Those are important context for judging the rhetoric employed by radio talk show hosts and political commentators. Knowing so little of our history must make insights to the tribal warfare in the Iraq and the dangers of demagoguery here difficult and unlikely.

    Will they have learned such things prior to graduation.
  • Not a new narrative
  • Posted by waitingfortherealinsights , Adminstrator/Professor on May 19, 2011 at 11:15am EDT
  • It's nice to see an administrator return to the classroom, but it's unfortunate to see cliches repeated regarding teaching, learning, and first year students. I would hope the provost at the University of Richmond is enough informed about pedagogy to know that first year students don't arrive knowing everything about writing (you sort of have to teach it if you want them to do it well...conversations about labor don't teach sentence structure) and that, yes, one does need years of practice (as a WAC program might provide) to get better at written and related forms of expression. It's time that we get off our high horses about cultural literacy as well. Some students don't know about Waco. Unfortunate. But hardly a testament that they don't know anything. I have many colleagues who lack cultural literacy in many areas of experience, and they have PhDs. Each generation lacks a certain amount of cultural literacy than the preceding one did. And each newer generation has a certain amount of cultural literacy the previous one still doesn't. We fool ourselves (as did our predecessors) if we believe that only this generation doesn't know about a major event that happened when they were eight. The narrative told here is an old one and only reveals an overall lack of cultural literacy on the provost's part (student learning, current pedagogies, insight into the first year experience, etc). While the 18 year old doesn't know Waco, the provost is completely unfamiliar with an entire body of thought.
  • Posted by Philip on May 19, 2011 at 2:15pm EDT
  • One class. Sixteen students, who are generally well-prepared.

    That's not the planet I live on.
  • toastmasters need not apply
  • Posted by content_counts on May 19, 2011 at 4:15pm EDT
  • regarding:
    "Lest you think my praise is limited to their communication skills, the substance of their presentations was impressive as well"

    the content is the message. It is artificial and ill informed to divorce substance and delivery. Certainly no one with knowledge of the canons of address would make this false distinction.
  • Just What the FPs Love to Hear
  • Posted by Klymov on May 19, 2011 at 5:00pm EDT
  • "I have to admit that even after grading seven sets of papers, evaluating 16 presentations, and leading four months of discussions, I was sad to see the semester end."

    Increase the class size to 25-30, multiply it by 4 sections, do such a 12 credit semester three times in one year, and see how you're holding up.

    That's the for-profit pace. Your special, one-class experience is held up by management as an ideal that can simply be endlessly duplicated.

    It isn't realistic at that volume.
  • Posted by Gary B. on May 19, 2011 at 5:45pm EDT
  • I appreciated this essay. But I think the follow-up comments here are valuable as well. Higher eduation and the many influences create a fascinating environment. I've been left with ample food for thought. For now.

    For 18 years I taught in a state university, primarily at the doctorate and post doctorate level, then 8 years ago I purposefully moved to an almost exclusively undergraduate institution. I've never been more alive as an educator. But all of the courses I teach are in a professional major at the junior & mostly senior level. Two years ago, I had an invitation to teach a section of "freshman seminar." And the experience dramaticlly changed my world. I then volunteered to teach that course again this year as an "overload." It has been a wonderful, if not time consuming adventure. I have also had many similar experiences to what the Dr. Allred described.

    This past year my "freshman seminar" course met in the same class room in the hour immediately preceeding my "senior capstone" course, consequently the two groups of students had an opprotunity to scope one another out as they trecked into and out of the room. I couldn't conceal my smile when a just turned 23 year old senior said of my freshman students: "They're sooooo young!"

    Like duh. Tell me about it.
  • Freshman
  • Posted by docstu on June 1, 2011 at 4:15pm EDT
  • Freshman are not always easy; but for the ones that are really there to learn-engage they are amazing. I love the statement that Ron Clark made in a PBS interview-he believes that a future President may be sitting in his class because he doesn't know which one it is he teaches them all as if they will be President one day. I am sure I have taught a few Presidents to be and they were once college freshman:)