4 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 27, 1993 be 5iigrn &dilg 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan JOSH DUBOW Editor in Chief ANDREw LEVY Editorial Page Editor Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the majority opinion of the Daily editorial board. All other cartoons, articles and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Shap s * I y imLase Yl1/fi't JswM 5, - ... we ; , C?;.c 5 ~r. , 'rA .rS ~n 5 .~r t rA ..Y 0 Research enables teachers to teach is intelligent way to attack problem By ERNST PULGRAM In a recent editorial ("Publish or Perish?" 9/28/93), you argue that assistant professors (APs) are so fiercely pressured to do research and publish that the quality of their teaching is impaired. You write: "The proof of a good teacher should be judged on teaching ability...," which can hardly be gainsaid. But you surely will agree that in addition to knowing how to teach, the essential ingredient in the teachers' performance is that they know what to teach. Students have the right to demand that instructors, whatever their rank in the academic hierarchy, be able to go beyond yesterday's wisdom, that they do not, year after year, trot out the same lecture notes and the same jokes, but that instead they keep abreast of progress and newness in their respective fields. This they accomplish by continuing their studies, by advancing their education, in the library and in the laboratory. One may well call this activity research, even if it does not lead to publication. But it certainly cannot be that kind of research that leads to shortcomings in one's teaching. That leaves only the requirement to publish as the alleged culprit. The prestige of a university is founded upon the worth of the faculty, both non-tenured and tenured. Proportionate to the prestige of the university is the value of the degrees - BA, MA, Ph.D. - it confers. Of course, the renown of a school is considerably enhanced if the scholarship of its faculty, at all ranks, is attested by publications. Therefore, to maintain its high reputation and the value of its degrees, the University must encourage, indeed demand, publications as an essential component of all professors' duties. You lament that "the pressure put on APs to research and have the research published is enormous" and that "they are many times forced to make teaching a secondary priority." Now all incoming APs are advised on what is expected of them if they wish to be promoted to tenure in due time, namely, teaching, the customary academic services, and a modicum of publications of respectable quality. The last is a Pulgram isHaywardKeniston Professor of ClassicalandRomance Linguistics, Emeritus at the Univer- sity. pledge, as it were, that upon promotion to a tenured rank, which implies permanence of employment, the University can reasonably expect that the new associate professors, eventually full professors, will pursue a career of scholarship and publications. Beginning APs are also given to understand that failure to perform adequately during a period of probation -generally from three to six years - will cause them to be discharged (with due notice given at least one year ahead). There exists, then, a contract between the University and each AP. If the obligation thus entered exceeds an AP's ability or willingness, the so- called "up-or-out" rule applies. To succeed does not require (as you put it) that APs "push themselves to the point of being superhuman"; but it does demand intelligence, industry, and ambition. In your opinion it is the pressure to publish added to other responsibilities, that forces APs to neglect their teaching duties - if indeed they are neglected by anyone. In fact, the threefold obligation of teaching, publishing, and research, rests with no less weight upon the tenured faculty. But if publishing caused damage to their teaching also, it would follow that at this University very little good teaching takes place - a view which, I trust, you do not. hold. It must be conceded that APs labor under the strain of a deadline; but their promotion to associate professor does not demand publications of the quantity expected for the next step, promotion to full professor. In fact, tenured professors who do not perform in a manner consonant with their rank, suffer the unpleasant consequences in their paycheck. Of course, we all have encountered excellent teachers who do not care to, or are unable to, compose an article or a book. If they are on the tenured level, they will at least have given evidence of their ability to do so by having been promoted from AP. But if their work in the classroom is truly outstanding, if they are sincerely and totally devoted to their students' education, then the University is lucky to have them and can afford to keep them; and it is also lucky to have the occasional genius who cannot teach. But if an AP discovers betimes that teaching is the only worthwhile academic activity and goal, then he or she might choose to seek, for the remaining period of pre-tenure employment, a school where publishing is less emphasized than it is at the University, where the ambience is more compatible with an aspirant's talents or inclinations. I do of course not mean to characterize such institutions as inferior: they steer a different course, seek a different reputation, and select a differently oriented faculty. In the good ones among them the students are well taught. You regret that APs are "forced to research (and publish) against their will to prove themselves worthy of tenure." No one should be thus forced. But scholars, whether budding as APs or in full bloom in later years, are prodded by ambition and by the pleasure that comes with success and recognition, and above all by the desire to inform and instruct. It is a curious fact - and I speak from experience gathered in a half-century as a teacher, publishing scholar, and judge on promotion committees - that most scholars derive from their own reading and work in the laboratory, from their research-without-publication I referred to earlier, an impulse, an urge to participate in ongoing discussion, to add their piece or mite of knowledge, to submit it to the critique of their peers, to let by means of the printed word the world know who they are and what they can do. Publishing is thus a form of teaching, albeit one addressed to a far greater number of students than are ever assembled in a classroom; for the scholar, who does not need to be "forced," it becomes an element of academic life. I really do not believe that APs are victims of a vicious system which not only overtaxes them but also prevents them from developing and displaying their full potential as teachers. Certainly those who do not publish do not "perish" (which is a slanted, loaded term). Hence I must reject this peremptory demand of yours: "Publish-or-perish is unfair to the University's APs and students, and it, in all its forms, must be purged forever from this campus." Forty-five years agogI myself was an AP here and I have known hundreds of APs since then, and many more all over the United States (and, in equivalent pre-tenure positions, abroad). Among them you would, I am sure, find few who accept either the premises of your editorial or its conclusions. . CODOH leaders hide neo-nazi pasts By HANK GREENSPAN In his guest "viewpoint" in the Daily ("Museum lacks evidence of genocide," (10/6/93), Holocaust denier Bradley Smith understandably went out of his way to attack Deborah Lipstadt, a pro- fessor of Modern Jewish Studies at Emory University. In her recent book, "Denyingthe Holocaust: The Growing Assault on Truth and Memory" (Free Press, 1993), Lipstadt has provided fascinating background on Smith and his colleagues that leaves no doubt 2haottheir noliticirootsand 2aenda Like David Duke, Smith was not always as publicly 'polite' and as superficially 'reasonable' as he now tends to present himself. Gestapo officer's penchant for killing elderly Jewish prisoners with his Ger- man shepherd dog. Smith reflected: "Let's say the dog was an 8O-nounder-hell, let's sav it that he has not lost his penchant for venom. Mark Weber, co-director of Smith's Committee for Open Debate on the Holocaust (CODOH), seems to speak from a more standard white su- premacist perspective. Lipstadt cites an interview in 1989, for example, in which Weber expressed his concern that the United States was becoming "a sort of Mexicanized, Puerto-Ricanized country" as a result of "white Ameri- cans" not sufficiently reproducing themselves. He thought it impossible and undesirable for "black Americans Holocaust denial not a 'viewpoint' To the Daily: I felt that the Daily's handling of Bradley Smith's letter to the editor ("Museum lacks evidence of genocide," 10/6/93) was done, overall, in a sensitive and well- thought-out manner. The Daily took important steps to clarify its decision to those members of the community who may be offended, in noticeable contrast to its behavior when Smith's advertisement ran in 1991, at which be true or false. Questions of fact, by contrast, are simply true or false, and wholly independent of one's point of view. While Smith's anti- Semitism is an opinion, his denial of historical fact is not. This is no mere question of semantics. Holocaust deniers do not publicize their misstatements in the hope of immediately changing our minds about the facts of the Holocaust. Rather, their short-term goal is to promote what they call "open debate" on the Holocaust. They seek to transform a matter of I do not suggest that the Daily editors have so aided Holocaust denial willfully. Printing the claims of Holocaust deniers while simultaneously denouncing it as an untruth can serve to alert the public tot he dangers posed by Bradley Smith and his ilk. But be careful how you frame the issue, lest even while attacking the lie you give it its victory. JONATHAN CHAIT LSA senior TO OUR READERS: