AS PROFESS MAINTAIN A SOME SAY T BY DAVID SCHWARTZ ,.B SARCH VS. TEAC] TORS STRUGGLE TO PROPER BALANCE, FHAT STUDENTS SUFFER FlING R z r - z Michigan a great university." Vest said the problem with hiring Engineering profes- sors who lack research ability is that "you end up teaching the history of technology, rather than the technology of the future." He said professors who are at the forefront of their fields have more knowledge to pass on to students and are consequently better teachers. Vest also discounted the importance of communica- tions skills for good teaching. He said professors' "depth of knowledge" and their "enthusiasm" are more important than communication ability. Regent Philip Power (D-Ann Arbor) said a potential problem facing the University is that there may not be "enough outstanding researchers who are also excellent teachers." University Vice President for Research Linda Wilson thinks that the University stresses research more than teaching because of "a major commitment to carry on a large part of the nation's research." "I think that the co-location of research and instruction in the same institution is one of the critical reasons why the United States has made so much progress in science," she said. University Prof. Harris McClamroch, president of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, a fac- ulty governing body, said junior faculty members here must concentrate on research if they want to obtain tenure. "At the University, one's research and scholarly work is more important (than teaching) in achieving tenure," McClamroch said. "There are very few teachers who are given promotions if their research is poor. "Some outstanding teachers who are looking for jobs as professors may not be able to do so at this university," McClamroch added. Although he said teaching is important, McClamroch said, "I think it's beneficial for students to study with professors who are at the cutting edge of their fields." PHOTOS BY DAVID LUBLINER O ne University faculty member is renowned for her research of the psychological effects of tele- vision, but is a poor teacher. Another faculty member is proficient in lecturing on nineteenth- century European history, but has little research experience. The researcher's findings have been published in respected medical journals throughout the world, while the teacher has repeatedly received favorable student and departmental evaluations. Which faculty member does the University value more - the researcher or the teacher? According to LSA Dean Peter Steiner, the University values quality research more than quality teaching because money is made from research and not from teaching. "The market rewards for excellence in research are greater than the market rewards for excellence in teaching," he said. Steiner also said it is easier to judge the merits of re- search than teaching prowess. "Proficiencies in research are fairly clearly identified," he said. "Though they are harder to document, teaching deficiencies can occur." Steiner said research quality is easier to judge because top researchers have established themselves in national and international journals. The performance of teachers is judged primarily by evaluations which many feel are too subjective to be accurate gauges. Although Physics Department Chair Homer Neal said both teaching and research are considered before granting tenure, he also said that "if a person were a leader in his field, he would be likely to receive a promotion even if there were a deficiency in his teaching performance." Chemistry Department Chair David Curtis agreed with Neal, saying that research experience outweighs teaching ability for assistant professors hoping to obtain tenure. "Basically, a young assistant professor has to have made a name for himself (to get tenure)," he said. "You have to show that you are a scholar." However, Curtis said that teaching ability remains a factor in determining who gets tenure. "We, in the department, do look at a person's teaching ability," he said. "(But) you can't get tenure just on that basis. In our department, rarely does research get neglected at the expense of teaching." According to Curtis, "the pendulum has swung too far" toward research and he has "been trying to do something about that." Curtis proposed that professors involve students in their research more than they have. Research is a primary learning source, he said. Schwartz is a Daily news staffer; Lubliner a staff photographer The "publish or perish" dilemma is certainly not restricted to the natural science departments. Poli- tical Science Chair Jack Walker said, "Around here, it's hard to get promoted if you haven't made a name for yourself." Walker attributed the recent increase in research at the University to former University President Harold Shapiro, who Walker said made an effort to hire deans who would stress research in their respective colleges. University Regent Thomas Roach (D-Saline) disputed Walker's statement, saying Shapiro did not favor research over teaching. "I think during President Shapiro's term, across the University... there was a push towards excel- lence," he said. The University is one of only a handful of universities categorized as "research universities." Other such institutions include Stanford, Johns Hopkins, MIT, and the University of Wisconsin, all of which conduct more research than the University. When Shapiro became University president in 1980, the amount of money spent on research here totaled $108.7 million. In 1987, the total expenditure was $213.0 million, an increase of 96 percent. Last year alone, re- search expenditures increased more than $30 million. Roach said Shapiro and the University as a whole stressed both research and teaching equally, saying, "I don't think (teaching and research) are out of balance at the University." Shapiro, now the president of Princeton University, could not be reached for comment. However, Interim President Robben Fleming said the emphasis placed on research at the expense of teaching varies from one University college to another. "There are some researchers who are not outstanding teachers, and vice versa," Fleming said. Steiner said both teaching and research ability are re- quirements for University professors, but he added that re- search is valued over teaching because of the University's role as a leading "research institution." He said he sees nothing wrong with the University status quo, and that students should not complain about the level of research undertaken. "The students here have chosen to come to a research university," he said. "We are a research university." Steiner said that if students were against the idea of at- tending a research university, they should have gone somewhere else. While it may be debated whether or not teaching suffers as a result, there is little argument about the emphasis placed on research. Engineering Dean Charles Vest said, "We in the College of Engineering are not going to tenure anyone who has not proven himself by quality research." Vest said a faculty member who is not involved with research "is likely in the long run not to be a good teacher" and added that "it's really... research that makes A lthough his students claim he is an outstanding teacher, Visiting Lecturer Matt Kerbel has not been offered a tenured position at the University. Kerbel conducts his Political Science 111 class more like the Phil Donahue Show than a conventional lecture, racing around the auditorium and shoving a cordless mi- crophone in students' faces to get responses to his ques- tions. The fact that he has not been offered a tenure track po- sition at the University has enraged some of his students. In January, a group called Students Concerned at Michigan (SCAM) formed to protest the emphasis placed on research at the.University. SCAM member Bonnie Dunninger said the group was created after Kerbel was not put on a tenure track. Kerbel has been offered a professorship at Vanderbilt University and is waiting for a possible offer from Stan- ford University. "(Not hiring Kerbel) just shows that in this school, re- search is given a higher priority than teaching," Dun- ninger said. "A better balance has to be restored between the two." Kerbel declined to comment. Walker also refused to comment on Kerbel's situation. SCAM members hope to negotiate with the deans of various colleges and convince them that teaching should take precedence over research, Dunninger said. The group has also picked up support from outside Kerbel's class. The Michigan Student Assembly passed a resolution in February supporting its demands. Former MSA President Ken Weine said research plays too large a role at the University. "It's unfortunate that the University presents such a view - that we are basically just a research institution," he said. "This 'publish or perish' attitude involves students' rights to get a quality education," Weine said. Physics Prof. Daniel Axelrod said teaching at the Uni- versity suffers because professors spend too much time doing research. "I do not think it is proper for the Univer- sity to neglect teaching as much as it does," he said. "The University says that research, teaching, and ser- vice are all equally important in getting tenure; but in fact, research is much more important," Axelrod said. "It's certainly a problem in the quality of teaching," he said. "People are not hired because they are excellent teachers; they are hired for excellent research." MSA military research adviser Tammy Wagner, a Rackham graduate student, agreed. She said the conflict between teaching and research is "almost irresponsible." "I think the problem that we're all concerned about, including myself, is that wedas students are competing for professors' time," she said. "Unfortunately, one of the definitions of getting tenure is getting published. It's part of the territory." Wagner encouraged students to protest the emphasis placed on research by the University. "I think that students really need to demand more time from their professors," she said. Wagner said the University simply "needs more professors." "The problem is not with the teachers; they're getting sat on more than anyone else," she said. However, Wagner did not discount the importance of research. "There is a feeling that (research) is the only way professors will remain current," she said. ccording to Physics Department Chair Neal, the debate concerning teaching and research is not clear-cut, because the two feed off of one another. "I think there are many mutually reinforcing factors of teaching and research," he said. He explained that successful researchers might be better teachers because they have more knowledge in their respective fields. History Prof. Sidney Fine, a professor known throughout the University community for his teaching ability, said the current level of research at the University Researcher Warren E wind tunnel in order t doesn't harm students. (between teaching anc one reinforces the othe Fine says he only t still have time for rese sponsibilities are to b best researcher I can be Political Science : proponent of academic say that the two prima tion and disseminati teaching." Tanter said, "I wot professors are attainir good communication research, they would their students, he said Professors at this 1 - time they must div service to their respe straints often force pr focus on either teachi other. Some professors ai tively, but many othe sacrificed, teaching or r In most instances, teaching. Most Univei the same thing - if ar standing teacher are be versity, the researcher Political Science Visiting Lecturer Matt Kerbel's unorthodox teaching style is immensely popular with his students. PAGE6 WEEKEND/APRIL 1, 1988 WEEKEND/APRIL 1, 1988