The comments section for yesterday’s most-emailed Times front-pager about the wave of retiring liberal boomer professors seems to consist mostly of “good riddance, dirty hippies” etc. etc. And like many people I’m occasionally amazed and appalled by the way the academy seems to provide a comfortable home for various unrepentant terrorists, unapologetic Stalinists, conspiracy nuts, and fraudsters/morons. But it’s also obvious that such people are few and far between–most liberal professors, I’m guessing, are a lot like the retiring UW-Madison scholar in the article, Michael Olneck, who is described as follows:
His father was a Socialist. Right out of high school, in 1964, Mr. Olneck organized support for the Mississippi Project’s black voter-registration drives. Later, he took a bus to Washington to protest the war in Vietnam, served on the strike coordinating committee atHarvard during the American invasion of Cambodia in 1970 and demonstrated atPresident Nixon’s inauguration in 1973.
In other words, he fought for civil rights when many people were trying to extend the nation’s centuries-long subjugation of minorities. Then he fought for getting the country out of a war it ruinously decided to extend, followed by protesting the criminal Nixon administration. Frankly, I’m glad someone who ended up so decisively on the right side of history chose to spend his career teaching young Americans. Better professor Olneck than one of the many people, still alive today, who were wrong on all counts.
Like many sociologists and education researchers, Mr. Olneck said that today both the kinds of analyses and the theories that prevailed when he was in college have changed. Overarching narratives, societal critiques and clarion calls for change — of the capitalist system or the social structure — have gone out of style. Today, with advances in statistical methods, many sociologists have moved to model themselves on clinical researchers with large, randomized experiments as their gold standard. In their eyes, this more scientific approach is less explicitly ideological than other kinds of research. Ms. Goldrick-Rab has embraced such experiments…”
I kind of see where the author is going with this, but I don’t think it really holds water. Dealing exclusively with theories and narratives isn’t necessarily radical (see Broder, David) and there’s nothing inherently moderate or non-ideological about data-focused research. It all depends on what kinds of questions you’re trying to answer and how you talk about results.


Kevin Carey appeared on C-SPAN's "Washington Journal" to talk about the education proposals put forth during Wednesday’s State of the Union speech, including endowments, student loans, college prices and No Child Left Behind. He also responded to telephone calls and electronic communications.
Andrew Rotherham is featured in CBS's "Where America Stands," a news special on the current state of the nation's schools.
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