Posts Tagged ‘recommendation letters’
Ten Thousand Tuesday Links
* Susannah Bartlow has been writing about her side of the Assata Shakur mural controversy: 1, 2.
* Saint Louis University has removed a statue on its campus depicting a famous Jesuit missionary priest praying over American Indians after a cohort of students and faculty continued to complain the sculpture symbolized white supremacy, racism and colonialism.
* Ursula K. Le Guin Calls on Fantasy and Sci Fi Writers to (Continue to) Envision Alternatives to Capitalism. What Can Economics Learn From Science Fiction?
* Muslim fiction writers are turning to genres like sci-fi, fantasy, and comics.
* Slavoj Žižek’s Board Game Reviews.
* How to Advocate for the Liberal Arts: the State-University Edition.
* Post-tenure review: BOR-ed to death. Don’t believe the lies about UW and tenure. On Tenure and If You [Really] Want to Be a Badger. Upocalypse Final Update. Does Tenure Have a Future? An Open Forum. Twilight of the Professors. The End of Higher Education As We Know It.
Accidentally read another thinkpiece hectoring UW acs for daring to think of themselves while adjuncts exist. So wrongheaded on every level.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 9, 2015
Anyone who thinks what’s happening in Wisconsin is welcome news for contingent faculty, adjuncts, or grad students is completely deluded.
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 9, 2015
what if i told you “UW could see increase in adjunct faculty under proposed budget cuts” https://t.co/iajYj1Yd6R
— Gerry Canavan (@gerrycanavan) June 9, 2015
* Now more than ever: “Privilege” and the rhetoric of austerity.
* Meanwhile: college presidents are getting paid.
* Counterpoint: I was a liberal adjunct professor. My liberal students didn’t scare me at all.
* How to Tailor Your Online Image, or, Don’t Go to Grad School.
* McKinney nightmare. Disciplining Black Bodies: Racial Stereotypes of Cleanliness and Sexuality. Memories of the Jefferson Park Pool. Summer heat.
* America is still incredibly segregated.
* You Can Be Prosecuted for Clearing Your Browser History.
My sister is doing an experiment: Whenever men walk towards her, she doesn’t move out of the way first. So far she has collided with 28 men.
— Anna Breslaw (@annabreslaw) December 13, 2014
* Bernie Sanders: Let’s Spend $5.5 Billion to Employ 1 Million Young People.
* Meanwhile, Clinton advance the Canavan position on voter registration: just make it automatic. Now let’s talk about letting noncitizen permanent residents vote!
* And Chafee wants the metric system! This Democratic primary is truly devoted to Canavan demo.
* The Bureaucratic Utopia of Drone Warfare.
* NLRB: Duquesne Adjuncts May Form Union.
* Nice work if you can get it: Top Weather Service official creates consulting job — then takes it himself with $43,200 raise, watchdog says.
* You Can Be Prosecuted for Clearing Your Browser History.
* The Apple Watch could be the most successful flop in history.
* Put this one in the awkward file: just hours after the EPA released yet another massive study (literally, at just under 1000 pages) which found no evidence that fracking led to widespread pollution of drinking water (an outcome welcome by the oil industry and its backers and criticized by environmental groups), the director of the California Department of Conservation, which oversees the agency that regulates the state’s oil and gas industry, resigned as the culmination of a scandal over the contamination of California’s water supply by fracking wastewater dumping.
* The rules of Quidditch, revised edition.
* What’s Happening To Players At The Women’s World Cup, Where The Artificial Turf Is 120 Degrees.
* All about Fun Home: Primal Desire and the American Musical.
* Here’s what it would take for the US to run on 100% renewable energy. Bring on 2099!
* Calvin And Hobbes embodied the voice of the lonely child.
* The quick, offstage choreography of SNL costume changes.
* 100-year-old blackboard drawings found in Oklahoma school.
* How Clickhole Became the Best Thing on the Internet.
* Shocked, shocked: claw machines are rigged.
* Everything you know about wolf packs is wrong.
* Only known chimp war reveals how societies splinter.
* Sleuthing reveals Shorewood home was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright.
* I’ve been spending too much time on recommendation letters.
* I also chose the wrong career: I should have been a psychic, or at least whatever this guy was doing before he managed to lose three-quarters of a million dollars to a psychic.
* Different People Have Different Opinions About Burning Their Own Children Alive, And That’s Okay.
* “What ‘Game of Thrones’ Can Teach Us About Great Customer Service.”
* Warp drives and scientific reasoning.
* The things you learn having a good editor: “Mexican Standoff” predates film by fifty years, and probably is participating in anti-Mexican prejudice.
* Language is like gymnastics.
* But keep hope alive: J.K. Rowling says there’s an American Hogwarts.
Written by gerrycanavan
June 9, 2015 at 12:36 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic freedom, academic job market, adjunctification, adjuncts, administrative blight, airport security, Alison Bechdel, alpha males, America, anti-capitalism, Apple Watch, architecture, Assata Shakur, austerity, Bernie Sanders, beta males, brands, bureaucracy, Calvin and Hobbes, capitalism, CEOs, chimps, claw machines, comics, costumes, customer service, Democratic primary 2016, don't go to grad school, drones, Duquesne University, ecology, economics, energy, EPA, feminism, FIFA, fracking, Frank Lloyd Wright, Fun Home, futurity, Game of Thrones, games, George R. R. Martin, gig economy, gigs, gymnastics, Harry Potter, Hillary Clinton, hoaxes, Hogwarts, How the University Works, Internet, Islam, J.K. Rowling, Jesuits, jobs, Kalief Browder, labor, language, loneliness, manslamming, Marquette, masculinity, McKinny, metric system, Mexican standoffs, middlemen, Milwaukee, monkeys, musicals, my particular demographic, neoliberalism, Oklahoma, Ozymandias, pedagogy, poets, political correctness, pools, prejudice, privilege, psychics, Quidditch, race, racism, recommendation letters, renewable energy, Saturday Night Live, scams, schools, science, science fiction, Scott Walker, segregation, Shorewood, skepticism, snow leopards, soccer, social media, solitary confinement, St. Louis University, student movements, suicide, Tarantino, teaching, tenure, the humanities, the past is another country, torture, TSA, unions, University of Wisconsin, Ursula K. Le Guin, Utopia, UWM, voter registration, voting, war on education, warp drives, Wisconsin, wolf packs, wolves, Women's World Cup, words, work, zoos, Žižek
Thursday Night Links
* I saw this movie: Brains of rats connected allowing them to share information via internet.
* It bears repeating: The candidate’s adviser sent us a letter on which both “department of history” and “faculty of arts and sciences” were misspelled.
* Advice From Tenure-Track Faculty To Those Entering The Profession.
* Beyond the MOOC: While other universities move quickly to offer courses online for free, Carnegie Mellon University is instead starting for-profit efforts designed to capture segments of the education market. I’ll promote this a bit more as the date gets closer, but I’ll be speaking at a “What’s the Matter with MOOCs?” event at UWM in mid-March.
* Boots on Campus: Yale Flap Highlights Militarization of Academia.
* Student Debt Nearly Tripled In 8 Years, New York Federal Reserve Reports.
* The Dan Harmon backlash, at the AV Club and TNR (of all things).
* Justice, American style: The city’s complaint in federal court claims that if Ms. Truong is entitled to damages for the nearly three years she spent in jail awaiting trial, then Mr. Ryan is as much to blame as the city because he took too long to get the coerced confession tossed out of court by the judge.
* What is happening with Bob Woodward? Seriously, WTF Is Up With Bob Woodward?
* Will a Republican friend-of-the-court brief tip the Supreme Court in favor of gay marriage? I’m pretty sure it’ll have more luck than Obama’s.
* These numbers are unprecedented: by 2014 President Obama will have deported over 2 million people – more in six years than all people deported before 1997. That “before 1997” actually means since 1892.
* AFL-CIO Executive Council Endorses Comprehensive Doomsday Policy for Working Families.
“We need union jobs today, not tomorrow,” said Rich Trumka, President of the AFL-CIO. “The resolution balances our desire to protect the fragile ecosystem of the earth, while acknowledging the economic benefits of a high-road strategy to develop the doomsday technologies of the future.”
* Never forget: The entire staff of the West Wing died on Voyager.
* How Timothy Zahn’s Heir to the EmpireTurned Star Wars into Science Fiction.
* Women Work Harder Than Men, Study Says.
* When the White House was completely gutted.
The social events of the 1948 holiday season had to be canceled. And with good reason: Experts called the third floor of the White House “an outstanding example of a firetrap.” The result of a federally commissioned report found the mansion’s plumbing “makeshift and unsanitary,” while “the structural deterioration [was] in ‘appalling degree,’ and threatening complete collapse.” The congressional commission on the matter was considering the option of abandoning the structure altogether in favor of a built-from-scratch mansion, but President Truman lobbied for the restoration.
* When Martin Luther King played pool.
* “Preserved” plushies in jars.
* Help wanted: must be infallible.
* They’re making a movie out of The Drowned World.
* Shale Gas Fracking Will Be Around For a Long, Long Time.
* And American history, Breitbart style: Journalists on the campaign trail saw Johnson drunkenly board a plane armed with nuclear weapons and then accidentally drop them on the United States. We all saw it!
Written by gerrycanavan
February 28, 2013 at 9:16 pm
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, academic jobs, actually existing media bias, admissions, AFL-CIO, America, apocalypse, Barack Obama, Bob Woodward, Carnegie Mellon, Catholicism, climate change, community, Dan Harmon, Duke, ecology, enough bullshit already, gay rights, grad student nightmares, Heir to the Empire, history, How the University Works, hydrofracking, immigration, J.G. Ballard, journamalism, justice, labor, Lolita, Lyndon Johnson, mad science, marriage equality, military-industrial complex, MLK, MOOCs, Nabokov, nuclearity, our brains work in interesting ways, police corruption, police state, politics, pool, rats, recommendation letters, Republicans, Russia, Star Trek, Star Wars, student debt, stuffed animals, Supreme Court, telepathy, tenure, the courts, The Drowned World, the law, the Pope, the Vatican, true facts, unions, UWM, Voyager, we all saw it, We're screwed, West Wing, what it is I think I'm doing, White House, women, work, Yale
How Not to Write Recommendation Letters
New research finds gender bias in recommendation letters.
The research is based on a content analysis of 624 letters of recommendation submitted on behalf of 194 applicants for eight junior faculty positions at an unidentified research university. The study found patterns in which different kinds of words were more likely to be used to describe women, while other words were more often used to describe men.
In theory, both sets of words were positive. There’s nothing wrong, one might hope, with being a supportive colleague. But the researchers then took the letters, removed identifying information, and controlled for such factors as number of papers published, number of honors received, and various other objective criteria. When search committee members were asked to compare candidates of comparable objective criteria, those whose letters praised them for “communal” or “emotive” qualities (those associated with women) were ranked lower than others.
The research found no difference between men and women as letter writers — both are more likely to describe women with communal words than they are to describe men that way. And the bias appears to act against male candidates who are praised for traits people associate with women. But a much higher proportion of female candidates — regardless of their overall qualifications — are praised with these words that appear to hurt their chances of being hired for faculty jobs.
Written by gerrycanavan
November 12, 2010 at 8:55 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, gender, How the University Works, recommendation letters