Queensborough Community College Dispute Resolved!

Dear Commons Community,

Earlier this week, I posted about the situation at Queensborough Community College and the dispute between the English Department and President Diane Call.  Gail Addis forwarded to me today the news (see below) that President Call has decided to accept the recommendation of the English Department that Professor David Humphries assume the chairmanship.  We join in congratulating our colleagues at Queensborough in resolving their differences.

Tony

==============================================================

Colleagues—

It is my decision to accept the recommendation forwarded by the English Department for Dr. David Humphries to serve as its Chairperson, effective November 14, 2012.

In a lengthy meeting with Dr. Humphries yesterday, he expressed his willingness and ability to advance the important work of the English Department in curricular and personnel matters. I have confidence in and appreciate his sincerity to unite the department as a community, in the best interests of the College and our students.

Thank you.
dc

Dr. Diane B. Call
Interim President
Queensborough Community College/CUNY
Telephone: 1.718.631.6222
Fax: 1.718.281.5588

 

 

Governor Bobby Jindal: The GOP Needs to “Stop Being the Stupid Party”!

Dear Commons Community,

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal (R) issued one of the more pointed post-election public criticisms of Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign, saying that the Republican nominee did too little to set out an inspiring vision for governance.

Jindal also told Politico the GOP needs to “stop being the stupid party.”

He went on to explain the party needs to appeal to more voters and stay away from bizarre, offensive comments that damage the brand.   As reported in the Huffington Post;

“Mitt Romney is an honorable man. He’s a good honest man. He deserves our respect, and our gratitude,” Jindal told The Huffington Post in a phone interview. “The reality of it, the campaign was too much about biography. It wasn’t enough about a vision of where they wanted to take our country, and how they would do it.”

“The reality is people are not being inspired by a biography,” Jindal said. “We have got to offer that vision.”

Jindal made the comments as he talked about the need for Republicans to detail their policy ideas. He said that the Romney campaign’s focus on marketing its candidate as a businessman who could fix a stalled economy, rather than running on a bold presentation of conservative principles, was, “one of the reasons this got obscured.”

Jindal, a 41-year-old, second-term governor, was initially considered a possible vice presidential pick for Romney, despite the fact that Jindal endorsed Texas Gov. Rick Perry in the Republican primary. But Jindal and Romney lacked personal chemistry, according to multiple sources, and Jindal had a limited presence for Romney on the campaign trail.

Jindal is now considered one of the GOP’s top prospects to run for president in 2016. And already he is putting down markers as to the kind of conservative voice he wants to be in the coming years. In a 30-minute interview Tuesday, he was confrontational toward President Obama on health care, saying he will not implement the state exchange mandated by Obama’s Affordable Care Act, essentially daring the federal government to come in and try it themselves.

And in criticizing the risk-averse nature of the Romney campaign, Jindal made clear that he thinks a Republican can be successful by running toward topics that have traditionally been political trouble spots, rather than away from them.

“When we talk about balancing the budget and cutting the size of government, we’ve got to be honest with the American people. I’m all for cutting non-defense discretionary spending, but we have to be honest with the American people and say, ‘We also have to go and look at entitlement programs, that it’s not sustainable, the spending and borrowing that we’re doing today,'” Jindal said. “We need to be talking very specifically about social security, Medicare, Medicaid.”

Jindal, who ran both Louisiana’s hospital system and its university system before the age of 30, also sketched out how Republicans should talk about education.

“For too long we have given health care and education to the other party. And the reality is, if we believe in an aspirational society, we absolutely have to stand up for the right of every child to get a great education, because in this economy, that’s what it’s going to take to be able to pursue the American dream,” he said. “That means very specific policies about changing the way we hire, fire, compensate teachers, that’s based on a spirit of achievement and accountability, not just how long they’ve been in the classroom. It means meaningful student choice, so the dollars follow the child, whether it’s the tradtional public schools, charter schools, online schools, local schools, independent schools, whatever it takes to make sure that child’s getting a great education.”

“We need to be fierce advocates for that so a child’s future is not dependent on where they’re born, where they grew up, their zip code, their geography, their parent’s wealth,” he said.

Jindal makes a lot of sense but will the GOP listen?  It has four years to figure it out!!

Tony

 

Oxford University Press’s Word of the Year!

Dear Commons Community,

Oxford University Press yesterday released its annual Word of the Year.  Finalist in the competition included:

Eurogeddon: the potential financial collapse of the Eurozone, envisaged as having catastrophic implications for the region’s economic stability [from euro + (arma)geddon].

Super PAC: a type of independent political action committee which may raise unlimited sums of money from corporations, unions, and individuals but is not permitted to contribute to or coordinate directly with parties or candidates.

Superstorm: an unusually large and destructive storm

Nomophobia: anxiety caused by being without one’s mobile phone.

[from no and mo(bile) + phobia]

Higgs boson: a subatomic particle whose existence is predicted by the theory that unified the weak and electromagnetic interactions.

YOLO: you only live once; typically used as rationale or endorsement for impulsive or irresponsible behavior.

MOOC: massive open online course; a university course offered free of charge via the internet.

And the winner for 2012 is GIF.

“The GIF, a compressed file format for images that can be used to create simple, looping animations, turned 25 this year, but like so many other relics of the 80s, it has never been trendier,” noted Katherine Martin, Head of the US Dictionaries Program at Oxford University Press USA, in a press release marking the announcement.

“GIF celebrated a lexical milestone in 2012, gaining traction as a verb, not just a noun. The GIF has evolved from a medium for pop-cultural memes into a tool with serious applications including research and journalism, and its lexical identity is transforming to keep pace.”

The word is chosen by a team of lexicographers and consultants to the dictionary team, along with editorial, marketing, and publicity staff at OUP, so read into that what you will.

Click on the GIF below.

Tony

 

 

Petition at Queensborough Community College!

Dear Commons Community,

Gail Katherine Addiss provided an update on the situation at Queensborough Community College and the appointment of a temporary chair for the English Department.  She mentions that an electronic petition has been circulated asking President Diane Call to reverse her position on the appointment. The petition states:

“Dear President Call,

This is an open letter written on behalf of the 22 fulltime English Professors who voted for a change in leadership of our department and the many other faculty members, full and part-time, who support our decision. We and the undersigned are dismayed at your decision to reject our near three-fourths majority vote and appoint a temporary chair while a new chair is recruited in a national search. That you announced your decision to disregard our vote on Election Day would be amusing if the current situation were not so troubling.

We demand that you honor our vote and immediately approve our recommendation of Professor David Humphries as Chair of the English department.”

The CUNY community should be aware of this matter and faculty in particular should consider signing this petition.  As of a few minutes ago, there were more than 750 signers.

Petition link:

https://www.change.org/petitions/president-diane-call-reconsider-your-decision-to-deny-the-english-department-s-vote-for-chair#

Tony

 

Conservative Entertainment Complex and Fox News!!

Dear Commons Community,

The Huffington Post Live had an interesting interview with a panel of analysts and bloggers discussing the Republican Party, conservatives, and the media particularly Fox News,  and radio broadcasters such as Rush Limbaugh and Laura Ingraham.  Referring to the “conservative entertainment complex”,  the major theme was that the Republican Party has been manipulated by the media such as Fox much to the Party’s detriment.  The most interesting comments came from Joe Muto, the man better known as the “Fox News Mole”.

Back in April, Muto lit up the Internet with a series of anonymous posts on Gawker that lifted the curtain on some of the goings-on at Fox News. The network promptly fired him and sent the police after him.

He talked to HuffPost Live host Abby Huntsman about how jaded some of the behind-the-scenes talent at Fox News is.

“The people at Fox are not stupid,” he said. “They know when they have Dick Morris or one of these other pundits on predicting a landslide victory for Romney, the people behind the scenes know that it’s all bluster. They know that this is sort of an entertainment. They know that a lot of these people are just hucksters … we producers know that this is all a farce. The reason we don’t step in and give a reality check to our audience is because that’s terrible for ratings.”

Muto also talked about Fox News hosts Megyn Kelly, Bill O’Reilly and Sean Hannity, and predicted that the network will sand down some of its hard-right edges in coming years.

We will see.

Tony

 

 

MSNBC: Gaining Ground on Fox News!!

Dear Commons Community,

For those of you who follow cable news, the three main channels are Fox News (on the right), MSNBC (on the left) and CNN (somewhere in the middle but leans left).  On  election night, when President Obama was elected to a second term, many at MSNBC also felt they had won.  As reported in the New York Times today:

“If Fox sees itself as the voice of the opposition to the president, MSNBC sees itself as the voice of Mr. Obama’s America. Its story resembles that of so many other cable channels. It hit on a winning strategy (antiwar liberalism led by Keith Olbermann at 8 p.m.), added similar shows (like Rachel Maddow’s at 9 p.m., which became the channel’s tent pole when Mr. Olbermann left in 2011) and then sold its audience as something more: a community of passionate, like-minded people…

Many progressives (and conservatives) now view the channel as a megaphone for liberal politicians, ideas and attacks against those who disagree. Such a megaphone — clearly marked, always on — has never existed before on television.”

MSNBC has a long way to go to overtake the Fox News Channel. On most nights this year, Fox had two million more viewers than MSNBC.

But the two channels, which skew toward an audience that is 55 or older, are on average separated by fewer than 300,000 viewers in the 25- to 54-year-old demographic that advertisers desire. On three nights in a row after the election last week, MSNBC — whose hosts reveled in Mr. Obama’s victory — had more viewers than Fox in that demographic.

“We’re closer to Fox than we’ve ever been,” said Phil Griffin, the president of MSNBC, who has been trying to overtake Fox for years. “All of this is great for 2013, 2014 to keep building.”

Congratulations to MSNBC!

Tony

 

Maureen Dowd Zings the Republicans!

Dear Commons Community,

Maureen Dowd in her New York Times column today shows no mercy on the Republicans and their losses in this year’s elections.  Here are a few examples:

“Team Romney has every reason to be shellshocked. Its candidate, after all, resoundingly won the election of the country he was wooing. Mitt Romney is the president of white male America.  Maybe the group can retreat to a man cave in a Whiter House, with mahogany paneling, brown leather Chesterfields, a moose head over the fireplace, an elevator for the presidential limo..”

“As W.’s former aide Karen Hughes put it in Politico on Friday, “If another Republican man says anything about rape other than it is a horrific, violent crime, I want to personally cut out his tongue.”

Or what I thought was the best:

“Until now, Republicans and Fox News have excelled at conjuring alternate realities. But this time, they made the mistake of believing their fake world actually existed. As Fox’s Megyn Kelly said to Karl Rove on election night, when he argued against calling Ohio for Obama: “Is this just math that you do as a Republican to make yourself feel better?”

Worth the read!

Tony

 

Nate Silver Evaluates the Presidential Election Polls!

Dear Commons Community,

During the final few weeks of the recent presidential election, it seemed like everyday, there was a poll conducted by some organization showing the preferences of likely voters.  If you were someone who watched or read different news reports, it was difficult to figure out in which poll to believe since in many cases they were not consistent.  Nate Silver, a most respected statistician and author of the best-seller, The Signal and the Noise, on his blog, has done an analysis of the election polling and has ranked all of the major polling organizations for the 2018 election.   The rankings are above but in a nutshell:  IBD/TIPP, Google Consumer Surveys, and Mellman were the most accurate while Gallup, Mason-Dixon and American Research Group were the least accurate.    As can be seen in the rankings, there is a a good deal of disparity among the pollsters.

His conclusion:

“it turned out that most polling firms underestimated Mr. Obama’s performance, so those that had what had seemed to be Democratic-leaning results were often closest to the final outcome.

Conversely, polls that were Republican-leaning relative to the consensus did especially poorly.”

Thank you Mr. Silver!

Tony

 

New President of Yale Peter Salovey on a Digital Strategy, Online Education and MOOCs!

Dear Commons Community,

Yale University said Thursday that Peter Salovey, a celebrated scholar of psychology who has been its provost for the past four years, would be its new president.  In his first interview since being named, he indicated that he will have a number if challenges.  One issue he sees as critical is accessibility.

“That means figuring out ways for deserving students to wind up on this campus,” he said, “but it also means a digital strategy that makes more of Yale’s treasure — whether it’s scholarship or pedagogy or collections — available online. Moving from a collection of opportunities to a deliberate strategy for giving the riches of Yale, the wealth of Yale, away.”

That includes online education, a field which many universities are now struggling to navigate.

“I think the excitement about MOOCs” — massive online open courses — “is fine,” Dr. Salovey said, “but it’s really only one part of what online tools can provide, and it may in the end not be the most important part.”

A potentially larger question, he said, is how to adapt the old teaching model for students who have grown up online.

By way of experimentation, in the seminar he teaches this semester, called Great Big Ideas, students watch the course’s lectures online, leaving classroom time entirely free for interactive discussion.”

Good luck to President Salovey and may he lead Yale well!

Tony