w w w V V w V V V w w w W- -lw_ 7- Quali'ty years?. By Sue Barto J UDY CUMBOW should be in her best days at the University now, when classes are intimate and relevant, and there's a sense of belonging. But the mechanical engineering senior says, "It's not what they led me to believe." Even in her upper-level courses,,"there are so many people you can't see the board," she says. For undergraduate students who come to the most expensive public university in the nation expecting to be noticed, it is sometimes a disillusioning four years to graduation. Along the way, students can feel left out in the hallway of a University which builds its reputation on research and graduate schools. For students like Cumbow, who end up in large lecture halls straining to see a chalkboard or a grease-penciled outline on an overhead projector screen, there seems to be a disparity between the University's student-faculty ratio. of 12-1 and the reality of classes here. "Given the student-faculty ratios, I don't know what the professors are doing, because they're not teaching," Cumbow says. A lot of them are doing research. Getting published and bringing in research grants is crucial for gaining job security at the University. Reputations make a big difference in the race for foundation and government money, and alumni seem more willing to dig into their pockets when they see the University quoted in papers like The New York Times, analyzing the nation's economic and social trends. Economics Department Chairman Edward Gramlich puts it bluntly: "It's good to bring in research grants. The University would go broke if we didn't." But the same money that helps pay professor's salaries and replace aging lab equipment also keeps some professors out of the classroom. While research and graduate education go hand in hand, many see undergraduate education suffering as a result. With larger classes, more teaching assistants, and less personal attention, the undergraduate student is unlikely to breathe the rarified academic air he or she hoped to find here. Some students. like LSA iunior Julie MacKenzie, feel some professors view class as a rankling burden that keeps them from more important things. She says her German professor last year seemed put out by having to be in class. "We knew he would much rather be upstairs in his office interpreting Ger- man poetry than to have to teach a class. It was so obvious he didn't want to be teaching," she says. Gramlich and other professors con- tend research expertise can make a classroom come alive with fresh ideas. But often research prevents professors from teaching in the first place. Gramlich calls Economics Prof. Saul Hymans "one of our best teachers;" but the nationally renowned economic forecaster only teaches one class this term, a macroeconomics course for graduate students. "I could insist that I do some teaching at the undergraduate level; the fact that I don't would indicate that I'd rather teach graduates," Hymans said. "It's a matter of slothfulness, I sup- pose. It's a track you get into." Even though Hymans gets little per- sonal contact with undergraduates, he says his research efforts can benefit them with a trickle down effect. "We have a sense of what makes the depar- tment go," he says. But some are less certain that un- dergraduate education is greatly affec- ted by the articles and breakthroughs that make the University famous: "In a situation where classes are larger than three, four or 500 studen- ts-and TAs are teeming in freshman and sophomore classes-the 'trickle down effect' is negligible," says Alfred Meyer, a political science professor. "We are a Ph.D.-producing, resear- ch-oriented University," he says. "The more distinguished the university, the less likely it is to pay attention to un- dergraduates." What that means, Meyer says, is that undergraduate students have to be more assertive asking questions and seeking out professors if'they want to avoid an assembly line education, "Attention (from professors) is either pure luck or pure student initiative," Meyer says. "This is a place which awards those who are aggressive," agrees Robert Weisbuch, associate chairman .of the English Department. While enrollments at English depar- tments at other universities have drop- ped sharply in recent years, the num- ber of English majors at the University has almost doubled in the past seven years. Class size has grown too, from an average of 24 students in 1974, to 34 students last fall. W ITH NUMBERS like that, in a class designed for give-and-take "We have a problem of atmosphere," Weisbuch says. Without more attention at the under-class level, he says he would think twice about sending his children here before their junior year. In the Economics department, Gramlich says he doesn't like the packed lectures any more than students do, but even though the department hired six new faculty members in the fall, the problem remains. "We've been screaming for new positions, (but) there are an awful lot of undergraduates to be taught here." Although Gramlich is lukewarm about the idea, he suggests that the Univer- sity could resort to using videotaped lectures for its 20,809 undergraduate students, as do Michigan State Univer- sity and the University of California at Berkeley. But for many students, the attention paid to them by professors give them is scanty enough without increasing the distance with a video screen. "Every semester I've had at least one class where there was poor com- munication," says LSA senior Andrea Greenberg. "Either there was no syllabus, or tests were announced too late, or the papers weren't handed back until three weeks later." These types of complaints have been getting through to some people in the University-enough to prompt the LSA- joint Student Faculty Policy Committee to suggest a list of 10 guidelines for im- proving teaching on campus. The guidelines, originally drafted by Near Eastern Studies Prof. Louis Orlin in September, recommend that faculty be more available in office hours, hand out syllabi and course outlines at the beginning of the term, and critique all work that students hand in. "Students feel powerless. They fall between the cracks," Orlin says. Meaty T-Bone Burnett Prism Productions Second Chance 9 p.m., Tuesday, March 13 -c a Academe: Anonymity on the steps But in its February meeting, the LSA faculty turned down the guidelines 32- 10, and asked that the committee come up with a toned-down proposal. Faculty members criticized elements of the proposal as too restrictive and difficult to enforce. Supporters of the proposal have been somewhat taken aback by the opposition. Orlin says he was trying to develop "an internal sense of correctness," not a repressive teaching environment. Weisbuch too regards the guidelines as one reasonable step toward im- proving undergraduate education. Everything they are suggesting is reasonable.. . people think they're rab- ble-rousers, but it's hardly radical," Weisbuch says. "The document is a symbolic action of the concern of faculty for undergraduate education." While it is questionable whether LSA will ever adopt the teaching proposal, in some parts of the University, per- sonal contact between students and professors is the rule rather than the ex- ception. The Residential College, founded in 1967, was based on the idea that the class doesn't end when the hour is over. Carl Cohen, a philosophy professor in the college, who has a joint appoin- tment in LSA, says "My colleagues in the (LSA) philosophy department teach. very hard, but the situation is much larger and perhaps not as warm." In the Residential College, Cohen says, "It has been my experience that I will raise a question in class in the mor- ning, and later in the day I will hear students arguing about it in the corridor as I am leaving my office." "Whereas in LSA, you go from. Auditorium A back to Mosher-Jordan and no one will know what you were discussing in class." The Residential College concept in- cludes a requirement that students live in East Quad where the classes are taught for two years. The RC professors have offices in the Quad,and teach sections much smaller than those in LSA. Evaluations replace grades. "People here are more interested in education as a pure form rather than more superficial things like grades and degrees," says freshwoman Chris Merrill. "People are more motivated to know what they are learning," she adds. "The discussions are much livelier (than in LSA). . . if you blew off for two weeks the people in your class would be disappointed." John Mersereau, director of the college, regards it as one of the best places an undergraduate can get an education at the University. "WATE ARE NOT antagonistic to LSA, we are. part of it. We just think the Residential College is a more suitable option for un- dergraduates," he says. Mersereau says the RC does not give up research to teach, but explains that publishing is not as critical in the college as a basis for advancement. Some professors argue that research, even where it is a basis for promotion, is also crucial for saving the classroom from sterility and inertia.1 "I don't think scholarship is separated from teaching," says Weisbuch. "Some people assume it's either one thing or the other. I think that's baloney. More often than not, the people most in demand are the active By Joseph Kraus N ANSWER TO THE question of that ittle old ladyin the Wendy's ham- burger ads-you know the one who asks, "Where's the Beef?"-well, little old lady, the beef is, or will be, on Tuesday, right here in Ann Arbor. And we're not just talking about some little slab of a hamburger swimming in grease. No way, momma, this is grade A 100% T-Bone. T-Bone Burnett, to be exact-one of the most articulate figures in rock and one of its current hidden secrets. Burnett's music is - folk-influen- ced rock filled to the brim with in- telligent lyrics and even, ("What is this trash" scream the heavy metal freaks) acoustic guitars. Burnett's most recent album, Proof Through the Night, was released just last year and ' has met with great critical success and no small bit of commercial. In addition to featuring 11 unique songs, it features guest guitar work by Ry Cooder, Mick Ronson, Richard Thompson and Pete Town- shend-the old-time super stars know a good new thing when they hear it. Despite the fact that his music is new, Burnett's story is far from brief. Beggining as a producer, T-Bone worked closely with the' Stardust Cowboy, who has been described as one of the most geniusly demented in- FASHIONS-N- THINGS The Cotton Shop Two-piece all cotton pastel plaid dress Thi bautfu wo-iece et has .finish. The matching skirt is pleated with t wo roomy pockets and it is all tied together with a cotton obi sash, available separatey. 2-piece set-S,M,L Reg. $55 Now $44 Cotton obi $9.00 .We now have a beautiful collection of men's cotton shirts. M-F 9:0-,5:30; Sat. 9-5 994-6659 415 N. FIFT H AVE. (in Kerrytown). dividuals in rock history. From there, Burnett joined up with Bob Dylan's Rolling Thunder Revue, where he played guitar and piano. In a recent interview Burnett discussed the influence that Dylan has had on his own art, "I know he's had a really tremen- dous influence on me and everybody who came after him. .Dylan was the first guy to take what the Zen poets were doing. . . and popularize it. . . I think everybody that has come after him has been influenced by the way he uses words as arrows to go right into you" From the Revue, it was a quick stop with his own Alpha band and then on to a solo career. The cover of Proof Through the Night shows Burnett dressed in a classy gray trench coat looking a trifle Bogey-ish, and he has said of the album that he looked at it as something like a detective piece. "(I meant) Just that the songs were very open to interpretation. You know, I wrote them so that they could mean a lot of different things and I wan- ted an album that people could par- ticipate in the actual writing of, if they wanted to add the time and in- clination," he said. Burnett went on to discuss his ap- proach to writing music. "I actually write at the typewriter, usually, and then sort of figure some way to sing them. That's why so many of the songs are actually spoken. I don't know if they stand alone as poetry, I don't in- tend them that way." Burnett sees his album as a unified whole rather than simply a collection of songs. "I was trying to connect the songs through the theme and basically all three of my records have been writ- ten on the same theme: Which is that we're becoming a world of images rather than ideas. We're leaving behind our foundations. Really, I think ideas are the most powerful things on Earth," he said. However, for his next album, Burnett sees a change of theme. "It's not a career change, I'm just moving on to a new type of song. . . I think there's going to be a lot more solo, kind of acoustic music coming out," he said, denying any implication that it's a change in his art. T-Bone Burnett: Here's the beef Although he has spent most of per- forming career with a band, Burnett is coming to Ann Arbor alone. "I started playing solo because I found out that for one thing you get to meet people when you go out by yourself. . . when you go out with a band you sort of see the same 15 people in the entourage. And I can go a lot more places I wouldn't be able to go with a band. Also, the shows are a lot more personal; concentrated more on the songs. Oddly enough, a solo per- formance can be more powerful than a band's. People just have to gear their listening to the size of the sound. It's actually great." T-Bone Burnett plays this Tuesday at the Second Chance. Don't miss him-a solo's a lot better than a single. OF 0I 'Stew Art,- ARE 1IOU GOING ToYo MP1 TiE ITnCHCOCKc EEYONWS GO041 FIL MTIVAI ~l~~4T, I ) r Ur N' \\ I- I 4 ill N 613S. z 12 Weekend/Friday, March 9, 1984 5 ee