Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Are Students A Captive Audience? Constructive Disagreement And Classroom Politics

The perfect teacher.
Recently I was reading a discussion of the relationship between campus speech codes, sexual harassment, and free speech doctrine.  Because I am not a legal scholar I won't dwell on the details, but the dilemma for educational institutions is this:  how might one seek to regulate classroom expression that creates a hostile environment for students in a protected class without infringing on freedom of speech? Such utterances by a teacher or another student might include:  "Students of color are only here because of affirmative action;" "Tammy sure is easy on the eyes;"  or "Learning disabled people get extra time for the test, but I don't believe that anyone deserves accommodation."  (I made all these up, but I once knew a male prof who was famous for saying to any female student who had a hyphenated last name:  "Your mother must be one of those feminists.")

The answer to the questions I began with is this.  While individual speech acts in a classroom might be found to violate the right to work or learn in an environment free from harassment, speech codes do violate the right to free speech, as well as academic freedom. Furthermore, speech acts are only taken seriously as discrimination when perpetrated by a faculty member against a student.  In 2008 a member of the Dartmouth faculty sued on the claim that her students had created a hostile environment, and was mocked by the national press as a result.

Faculty are, in fact, perceived as having an almost uniquely destructive power to harm their students intellectually by forcing their views on them.  One way of thinking about this is what is called in labor law "captive audience doctrine," by which employees are forced to listen to political, religious or discriminatory speech.  If said employees resist, or refuse to participate as part of an audience for such speech, and are threatened with reprisal as a result, the captive audience doctrine might be invoked. (Note:  since the National Labor Relations Board is a mere shadow of its former self, actually winning a discrimination case or a grievance under captive audience doctrine is very difficult.)

Sound familiar to you?  This is more or less the principle on which conservative groups like Students for Academic Freedom ("You can't get a good education if they're only telling you half the story") and Minding the Campus assert that so-called "liberal indoctrination" in the classroom establishes a hostile environment for conservative students.  As the Student Bill of Rights published by SAF states,

Professors are hired to teach all students, not just students who share their political, religious and philosophical beliefs. It is essential therefore, that professors and lecturers not force their opinions about philosophy, politics and other contestable issues on students in the classroom and in all academic environments. This is a cardinal principle of academic freedom laid down by the American Association of University Professors.


In an academic environment professors are in a unique position of authority vis-à-vis their students. The use of academic incentives and disincentives to advance a partisan or sectarian view creates an environment of indoctrination which is unprofessional and contrary to the educational mission. It is a violation of students' academic freedom. The creation of closed, political fiefdoms in colleges, programs or departments, is the opposite of academic freedom, and does not deserve public subsidy or private educational support.
Contained in this statement, which mirrors what might appear to be a worthy standard for professional pedagogy, is language that points to a growing source of resentment among students:  faculty often tell them things that don't support, and even contradict, the world view that they brought to college in the first place.  What many teachers see as factual information, such students perceive as "opinions" that they must pretend to replicate, even if they have another "opinion."  What faculty see as reasoned argument that is well supported in the literature, and requires equally reasoned and well-supported argument to rebut, students can perceive as "indoctrination."

The two paragraphs I quoted above set the stage quite neatly for an application of captive audience doctrine to the classroom.  In the second, the faculty member's "unique position of authority" is emphasized, a position that is buttressed by "academic incentives and disincentives" (grades) that can be used to reward students who accept indoctrination and punish those who don't.

But are students always a captive audience?  Do faculty always hold a position of unique authority?  Does the fact of grading itself mean that the faculty member's unique authority is always already abusive?  And what are the implications of all of this for a liberal arts education -- which ought to be about debate, disagreement and transformation?

These may not be important questions for teachers of math and science (I am sure commenters will inform me on this point), but they are for those of us in the social sciences and humanities.  They are particularly serious questions for teachers of feminism, race, colonialism, post-colonialism and queer studies, who are repeatedly harassed by students and conservative organizations, and risk having the institutional support for their work withdrawn, because their work challenges centrist and conservative (and perhaps even liberal) views about race, sex, gender and empire.  However, a central issue for all social sciences and humanities scholars, regardless of field,  is that our very work and identities are built around the idea of constructive disagreement as a path to knowledge.  Useful disagreement depends on the notion that truth is not always an absolute value, and accepting the possibility that those things that are obvious are not always true.  If students do not believe they are empowered to disagree with us, and if disagreement itself is viewed as destructive in a classroom context, in what context can students be transformed into scholarly thinkers?  Conversely, if all student views -- no matter how factually incorrect of interpretively flawed -- have to be deferred to for fear of being charged with "indoctrination," under what conditions might a class acquire a body of knowledge about a subject, or a set of intellectual tools that constitute a recognized approach to that body of knowledge, at all?

Want some recommended reading?  Try Robert I. Sutton,  The No Asshole Rule:  Building a Civilized Workplace and Surviving One That Isn't (2007)Reviewed here at Tenured Radical in July 2007.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Celebrating The Greatest Generation (Of Women)

In case you didn't know it, today is Rosie the Riveter's 68th birthday.  Berkeley Ph.D. candidate Samuel Redman is celebrating on The Berkeley Blog with a piece just published today,  "Norman Rockwell’s Rosie the Riveter and World War II in American Memory." Okay, Rosie's probably a bit older than 68, but why would you ask a girl her real age?

Redman's piece documents Rosie's national debut on May 29 1943 on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post with a feature announcing her contributions to the war effort.  Look at the muscles on that gal!  She needs them to control that phallic rivet gun that she used to knock out one prefabricated ship after another.  According to About.com's Kennedy Hickman, "US shipyards would produce 2,751 Liberty Ships. The majority (1,552) of these came from new yards built on the West Coast and operated by Henry J. Kaiser."
Operating four yards in Richmond, CA and three in the Northwest, Kaiser developed methods for prefabricating and mass producing Liberty Ships. Components were built all across the US and transported to shipyards where the vessels could be assembled in record time. During the war, a Liberty Ship could be built in a about two weeks at a Kaiser yard. In November 1942, one of Kaiser's Richmond yards built a Liberty Ship (Robert E. Peary) in 4 days, 15 hours, and 29 minutes as a publicity stunt. Nationally, the average construction time was 42 days and by 1943, three Liberty Ships were being completed each day.
Redman draws on one of the many fabulous projects being done at the Regional Oral History Office at the Bancroft Library, this one intended to document the WWII home front in the Bay area.  Giving a sample of a few real "Rosies" in the story, Redman notes that while our memories are shaped by triumphant images of this military turning point in the twentieth century, "Both men and women who lived through this time, as they advance in age, continue to wrestle with sometimes conflicting memories about the war."

Friday, May 27, 2011

Living Abroad: "Life After Teaching in Korea"

Copyright Notice: If you are not reading this at All Education Matters, and unless I've explicitly given an individual or entity permission to publish my work, this post has been illegally appropriated. Please read original content here.


Since many of you have expressed an interest in knowing what it was like for me to live and work abroad, AEM has launched a new series entitled, "Living Abroad." These pieces are about American expats who have lived or are living abroad. I am also exploring options of moving abroad again in a year or year and a half, and will be writing about that possibility (primarily here), as well as sharing my own experience of living and working in Korea. If you are interested in sharing your story with my readers, please don't hesitate to send me an email (ccrynjohannsen@gmail.com). Those of you who have yet to leave the country are also welcome to submit pieces. This series is part of a public service to let indentured educated citizens know that there are other options, and that they can find fulfilling opportunities beyond U.S. borders. 


It is that time of the week again on Twitter! The wonderfully happy #followfriday tributes are flowing from Tweeps' fingertips around the globesphere (!), so the next post is befitting for the day, because this respondent was discovered on . . . Twitter. I found Jenn Pedde when sending out my tweet called "CODE HELP" to people who mention student loan debt. We immediately struck up a conversation, and somehow Korea came up. Jenn was delighted to hear that I had lived in Korea, because she has too. I asked Jenn if she'd be willing to contribute to my series, "Living Abroad," and she gladly agreed.

Here's what she had to say:

Deciding to teach abroad is a terrifying experience.  You’re not quite sure what is compelling you to want to leave everyone and everything behind when choosing to move to a foreign country.  Some would call it a general higher calling or a need to live differently.  Teaching abroad is not for everyone, which is a good thing.  Those that you meet when you’re out on the road are some of the most unique people in the world, and they will affect you greatly [my emphasis]. 

As it stands today, teaching abroad in Asia is the most rewarding, financially speaking.  Asian countries such as Japan, China, and South Korea pay a premium price for naturally born English speakers.  Salary packages will vary when it comes to the benefits offered. But for the majority of jobs in South Korea,* they will offer:

(a) a monthly salary;
(b) free housing;
(c)  free round trip airfare;
(d)  50% health insurance;
(e) and a bonus upon contract completion, and a pension.

The average monthly salary in Korea is around $2000, and the cost of living in the country is inexpensive, which enables a teacher to save significantly more than if they were living in Japan. Moreover, Japanese teaching positions do not generally offer such benefits, like round trip airfare.  Depending on where you find your job, you may or may not need a teaching certificate.  In Korea, most jobs do not require any teaching experience, but will pay more [if you have] certification or [you possess] advanced degrees.

After a year, many actually come to like the world of teaching English as a foreign language (TEFL).   I know I learned more about the English language while teaching it than I could have ever imagined.  It’s an incredibly difficult language to learn.  We have a lot of inconsistent rules and we love to steal words from other languages (For example, did you know that banana isn’t an English word?  Yep, we stole it from the Spanish).

So what do you do with that one-year of experience when you’re done?

In my case, one year wasn’t enough.  I stayed teaching in Seoul, South Korea for a total of 2.5 years.  I kept finding more opportunities and meeting more of the locals.   Getting invited to things like Korean weddings and family events and being so involved in another culture was almost addicting.   I have never felt so welcomed somewhere and that’s a hard feeling to give up.  I was once given a bottle of wine at a restaurant for just “being pretty” and that was after we paid the bill!  Asian hospitality is unmatched.

With such positive experiences, I returned home with thoughts of going back to school to get my Masters in TESOL and doing this for the rest of my life, but I decided to put that on hold.  The idea of being home to reconnect with family and friends was more important than going off gallivanting again, so I quickly dove into the job search.  If you put your teaching experience on your resume and highlight some of the tangible aspects of the position like working with a diverse staff, performing interviews for potential students, and creating lesson plans and report cards in a timely manner, these skills translate well into entry level jobs for a number of companies that have a global reach.  Your international experience and cultural knowledge may be extremely valuable to a company. It's also an amazing talking point in an interview.

You’re not limited to the field of education after teaching is on your resume, though you may find it inspiring.  You can translate the experience into a variety of areas and fields.  I myself went to work in technology and marketing, but I know that I’ll be back in Asia at some point in my life for more than just vacationing, and the potential for an advanced degree is still in the back of my mind.   I know plenty of former ex-pats who came home after one year and went on to get their MBAs or Master;s in Nursing because they also allow plan to use these degrees for future, professional travel.  At the end of the day, whatever you decide to do when you finish your teaching experience will seem like a breeze compared to the challenge of living abroad, but the options are all there. The world is yours!

Jenn Pedde is the community manager for the Masters in Social Work program at the University of Southern California.  She lived in Seoul, South Korea for 2.5 years teaching English. Jenn is an avid traveler who enjoys photography.

*I should note that in my experience, my hogwon did not pay for housing, healthcare, etc. Since they paid above average rates, that is how they justified not covering these costs. But Jenn is correct. Most hogwons cover such expenses.

Hongdae: Entertainment  District of Seoul  (where the founder of AEM, when not teaching and fighting on behalf of the indentured educated class, had loads of fun with good friends)

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Thursday, May 26, 2011

Isn't It Time To Bring The State Back In? Thoughts On The Recent Pew Report On Higher Ed

If you have a Google alert on "college," as I do, you will know that the last week has been filled with pundits weighing in on the question of whether college is a worthwhile investment.  This is because, on May 16, the Pew Center released a new report called  "Is Higher Education Worth It?  College Presidents, Public Assess Value, Quality and Mission of Higher Education." Highlight: although every feature of the report addresses the wreckage that privatization and cutting public education budgets has created over the last two decades, the report never suggests that getting the government back into the business of funding higher education would be a good start to solving any of these problems.

Now, although I always find what the Pew Center has to say interesting, as a researcher my first question about the study is this.  Putting aside the fact that there could be no demographics more narrow than "college presidents," or as imprecise as "the public," why was neither group asked what seems to be the most pertinent questions, which are: "Why do you think that the government stopped subsidizing higher education? Stopped taxing the wealthy, and corporations? Why did the government decide to shove the costs of becoming an educated citizenry onto a public that is, itself, being shoved into lower paying jobs so that corporations can make even larger profits that they will not be taxed on?" Another, and perhaps more scientifically framed, question that neither group was asked was:  "Do you think a robust, excellent and inclusive system of higher education serves a greater social and economic good, the benefits of which extend beyond the individual earner?  Would you agree to higher taxes for the wealthy so that your children could gain access to a quality college education at a low cost?"

I find this absence fascinating, since everyone in higher education, particularly college presidents, knows that these are the relevant questions.  The failure to ask them has, therefore, provoked a storm of pertinent but pointless articles about whether higher ed is worth it at all, and if it is, should entering first-year students head straight for the B.A. that has the greatest net worth, immediately and over time.  What are those degrees?  If you guessed "anything engineering!" you win; if you guessed "Petroleum engineer!" give yourself a gold star.  (It doesn't look like we are going green anytime soon.) 

The report is also full of intriguing nuggets that someone should follow up on.  For example,
A majority of Americans (57%) say the higher education system in the United States fails to provide students with good value for the money they and their families spend. An even larger majority—75%—says college is too expensive for most Americans to afford. At the same time, however, an overwhelming majority of college graduates—86%—say that college has been a good investment for them personally.
This same group believes that they make more money ($20K a year) because of their college degree and, conversely, that taking out the loans to pay for it has limited their life choices:
A record share of students are leaving college with a substantial debt burden, and among those who do, about half (48%) say that paying off that debt made it harder to pay other bills; a quarter say it has made it harder to buy a home (25%); and about a quarter say it has had an impact on their career choices (24%).
The landscape of higher education seems similar to Frederick Jackson Turner's 1893 lament about the closing of the American frontier.  People seem to believe in college, but it isn't within the grasp of those who actually might attend.
Nearly every parent surveyed (94%) says they expect their child to attend college, but even as college enrollments have reached record levels, most young adults in this country still do not attend a four-year college. The main barrier is financial. Among adults ages 18 to 34 who are not in school and do not have a bachelor’s degree, two-thirds say a major reason for not continuing their education is the need to support a family. Also, 57% say they would prefer to work and make money; and 48% say they can’t afford to go to college.
The college presidents were asked almost no questions about money, although their view of what a college education was "worth" expressed a whole set of values that you could predict (it's priceless!)  But the two parts of the survey simply don't mesh.  If students overwhelmingly say they don't go on to college because of finances, college presidents overwhelmingly say that college students are ill prepared to make use of college.  There is a complex study in there, in and of itself:  do part of that 48% actually know they are so ill-prepared for success in college that they don't consider it a worthwhile risk?  Conversely, are many of those students who appear to be ill-prepared simply working too much to attend to their studies?

This latter question strikes me as quite urgent, particularly since it is perceived as a phenomenon largely confined to public schools and community colleges.  This is where it has its largest impact.  But it is also the case that I have been aware, in my almost twenty years at Zenith, that a large number of students who are poor work several jobs, not just to pay their own bills but to send money home to their families.   Indeed, paychecks from college jobs that are often packaged in as part of financial aid often go straight to family members.  Many of these students eat less, sleep less, and have less time to study. 

Now, no one asked the college presidents why they thought students were less well-prepared, and what they would do about it if they could.  No one seems to have linked lack of preparation either to escalating poverty or the funneling of education dollars into the pockets of testing companies, constant drilling to the test, and talented teachers fleeing the profession because of how badly they are treated by school systems, much of which has happened as a result of No Child Left Behind (2001) and its subsequent iterations under the Obama administration.

This is the curious thing about this report is that it dances around policy questions, but doesn't ask a single one directly, or name a single policy that has shaped the higher education landscape.  "The public" is asked to confine its thoughts to individual success; "college presidents" are asked to ruminate on the mission of college.  But the two are never articulated as part of the same system, or as having a mutual set of interests that are social and organically intertwined.  And this, I would argue, is because neoliberal government policies, and right-wing political demagoguery, have sold the ideology of "low taxes" and "small government" so successfully that the moral commitment of the state to nurture an educated citizenry has entirely evaporated from the equation.

If "college presidents" and the Pew Foundation don't understand that, why wouldn't "the public" be confused about the present and future state of higher education?

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Point/CounterPoint - Pell Grants

Copyright Notice: If you are not reading this at All Education Matters, and unless I've explicitly given an individual or entity permission to publish my work, this post has been illegally appropriated. Please read original content here.

Splashlife asked me to take part in their series called "Point/Counterpoint" to discuss the call to cut Pell Grants. There is a heated debate going on in D.C. about cutting Pell, and it's related to austerity measures that our 'leaders' are trying to implement. I am adamantly opposed to cutting Pell Grants. Dr. Andrew Gillen, on the other hand, has a different take. Andy is at The Center for College Affordability and Productivity (CCAP), and he graciously agreed to argue against my points. Andy provided a summation on CCAP's blog of his take on Pell (here's his full argument on Splashlife). 

Here are some important points I made in favor of supporting increases to Pell: 

At a time when the U.S. government should be investing in its citizens and the country’s overall infrastructure, it is doing the exact opposite. After bailing out the banks and Wall Street, the very institutions and individuals who were responsible for the greatest economic downturn since the Great Depression, the government, both at local and national levels, now faces tremendous budget problems. A new and dangerous set of austerity proposals is sweeping across the country. These budget cuts are affecting universities and community colleges, and forcing them to increase tuition to combat the loss of financial support from government coffers. One critical source of funding for higher education – Pell Grants – is under attack. Pell Grants have long served to support access to higher education for low-income students. Presently, a ferocious fight is taking place in Congress, as Senator Rand Paul and others are proposing to significantly decrease the amount of funding allocated for Pell Grants. If funding for Pell Grants is cut, that would mean denying less-advantaged Americans access to higher education.

There is also the issue of the for-profits benefiting from Pell Grants, something that needs attention. That point is critical:

One of the legitimate criticisms of the Pell Grant program is that the for-profit college industry (oftentimes referred to as proprietary or career schools) benefits considerably while contributing little of value to higher education in America. There is a growing body of data that shows that many students do not have success in finding work (if they even graduate – dropout rates at these schools are quite high), and are saddled with high levels of student loan debt. Moreover, a recent study published by The Institute for College Access and Success  found that while default rates are on the rise among all students, the default rates for students who attend for-profit schools are significantly higher. For-profits also invest far more capital in marketing than in their instructors. Despite these obvious deficiencies in the for-profit education sector, in the past decade for-profits have seen Pell Grant aid increase eightfold. According to the U.S. Department of Education this sector receives 25 percent of the funds. But the problems with the for-profit industry are not insurmountable. Policymakers should come up with creative solutions that would hold these institutions accountable for their federal funding. Ideal solutions would have the potential of creating incentives for for-profits to invest more in their instructors, improve job placement rates, and lower the student borrower default rates. That would hold the institutions accountable, without hurting recipients of Pell Grants.  
I hope you read the piece - both my take and Andy's - in its entirety.

Finally, I wish to thank Andy for agreeing to take part in this important debate, as well as The CCAP for featuring and commenting on number of my pieces in previous months (links below).



"Trapped in Debt," originally posted on June 23, 2010

Links for 5/7/10 (Andy is the one who  made a comment about my work. The way he describes what I'm doing is quite humorous)



Monday, May 23, 2011

Do Girls Rule The World? A Response To Beyonce Inspired By A Young Feminist

It's really amazing what you can find on the interwebz
A feminist vlogger who posts to YouTube under the the name NineteenPercent is responsible for an incisive critique of the new Beyonce song "Run The World (Girls)." This young intellectual, who could give any second waver from the 1970s a run for her money, points out that putting snappy tunes out there about how girls (or women) "run the world" is diss-information since equality for "Lady Humans" is not on the agenda nowadays.  Then she runs it down how bad things really are:  in one state a bill making cockfighting a felony crime was passed recently but a bill that would have made assaulting your wife a felony failed.

If women are making 78 cents to every dollar a man earns, NP points out, women do not run the world.  Not even close to it.  Furthermore, women are definitely not running the anti-violence agenda if, when we discuss crimes that are overwhelmingly committed against women, we have to footnote our remarks apologetically by acknowledging that women are not the only victims of that crime, and men are not the only perps, and so it can't really be a way of enforcing systemic gender discrimination, right? 

Take rape for example.  This is a crime that Beyonce and her girlfriends are able to prevent in the video by dancing skillfully in front of a gang of men who have apparently come to beat and rape them.  Much as Austin Powers defeated the fembots, Beyonce and her dancers terrify their assailants into submission by donning metal fingernails, shaking their scantily-clad hoo-hoos at them, and proving (DUH!) that girls run the world.  However, apparently this technique has not yet been deployed on college campuses, which is why the rape of women by men (78% of college rapes are by a known assailant) is a huge problem.  Perhaps because it is a well-known fact that girls run the world, should you be in a situation convened to discuss said rapes, you may be reproved by men and women alike if you do not adhere to the following rules for discussion:
a.  You have to constantly amend everything you say to include the (often pointless and unproven) "fact" that men are raped by women too, and women are raped by other women.  You have to stipulate this even though, according to Department of Justice Statistics, 91% of rape victims in the United States are women, 99% of rapists are men and you are probably in that room because of a recent and (too) horrible (to cover up) rape of a woman by a man.  Go here if you want to see a truly idiotic discussion on the topic of female rapists that nevertheless semi-accurately reflects every exchange I have heard the under reporting of these dastardly criminals who are using forced sex to maintain their rule of the world.  Only one commenter interrupts the thread by asking: "how can women rape men without a penis? like, with a strap-on?"  No one answered this incisive question, so eager were they to break the silence and report on the dozens of men they personally knew who had been raped by women taking time off from ruling the world.

b.  You have to refer to a woman who has been raped as a "survivor" as if she had suffered a near death experience, or was returning from a form of social death caused by the rape.

c.  You have to have long conversations about consent, as if unwanted sexual intercourse had occurred because of a failure to communicate rather than a WOMAN being physically overpowered by a MAN who wanted it, and wanted it now.  What now passes for anti-rape programming is often commonly called "consent training." It is a lot like dog training, in which women are taught to send very clear signals (andnotgetdrunkandnotgoplacesaloneandneverleaveyourfriendsatapartyandstayprettycoveredupbecausea guymightgetthewrongideaanddontputyourdrinkdownanywheresomeonemightputsomethinginitanddontgoupstairs atthefrathousewithanyoneandalwaysmeetaguyinapublicplaceforthefirsttimedontlethimknowwhereyoulive) and men are taught to keep their ears free of wax so they can hear a woman say no -- "which means no!"  The difference between consent training and dog training is that in the latter case dogs receive treats when they listen and respond to commands (here's an idea:  women could carry cans of beer, and when they say no to sex and men agree not to rape them, the guy gets a can of beer.) You would be surprised how confusing "consent training" is to college women who end up believing that the outcome of any given sexual encounter is a fifty-fifty proposition even when they said quite clearly that they did not want to have sex
OK sure, did we expect much of Beyonce anyway, given that she was the woman whose big hit a couple years ago informed the man she dumped that she had done so, not because she didn't dig him, but because he hadn't "put a ring on it?" I think we know from whence she thinks grrrrl power derives (should Hilary try this in the Middle East?)  So without further ado, let's hear from NineteenPercent.



Hat tip.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

UPDATED Primer: All Education Matters

Copyright Notice: If you are not reading this at All Education Matters, and unless I've explicitly given an individual or entity permission to publish my work, this post has been illegally appropriated. Please read original content here.


If you are new to All Education Matters, I want to assure you that you are not alone. There are millions of people, like you, who are struggling or unable to pay off their student loan debt. In fact, by June of 2012 outstanding student loan debt is expected to hit $1 trillion. That is precisely why I assert that there is a student loan debt crisis. While many critics will suggest that it is your responsibility to pay back your loans, they fail to grasp two important things. First, nearly all the student debtors with whom I have spoken (and by now that is in the thousands) want to pay back their loans. They take full responsibility for their student loan debt, but are frustrated by the private lenders' refusal to work with them on negotiating new terms for repayment. Moreover, if one defers or puts loan(s) into forbearance, that borrower can rack up hefty fees, penalties, accrued interest, etc. That means that a modest loan can quickly balloon, making it difficult to ever pay off. (There is also the issue of defaulters, but I'll table that one for now). I know of countless cases in which someone borrowed, say, $50,000 and now owes upwards of $100,000 or more. Sadly, lenders can justify their fees all they wish, and they are getting away with it. Those justifications, however, will fall on deaf ears in this corner of the world, and that is because they are making money by keeping people in debt. Sick, isn't it? That tells me that the system is broken. It is usury at its worst, and that is why we need a solution now.

Who I am

I am Cryn Johannsen, the founder & executive director of All Education Matters (AEM). I am an advocate and researcher for - what I call - the indentured educated class (i.e., student loan debtors). I am a regular writer for USA Today and have blogged for the Huffington Post. In addition, I have been published in scholarly journals and revered online publications (see here and here), and am well-connected to other groups and individuals who work on issues relating to student loan debt and higher education finance reform. Indeed, there are the non-profit groups like SponsorChange, the political groups, like Shared Sacrifice, and the ever aggressive 'scambloggers,' who work on exposing the truth about law schools. Nando's Third Tier Reality is most notable, and we have worked together on numerous occasions. (Most recently, Nando and I organized an online talk - the JD in the New Economy - with WestLaw. I was the moderator, and Nando was one of the panelists. Incidentally, you can sign up and listen to that debate for free). That's just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the various groups and individuals whom I work with. I also work on a regular basis with congressional offices and policymakers in order to influence legislation that has the potential of affecting millions of student loan debtors. Most recently, I was the managing editor for EduLender's blog, EduTrends.

I am also an educator, and am passionate about teaching (I have taught abroad and in the U.S.). Last year, when I founded AEM, I was teaching and living abroad in Korea. I have now lived on three continents and am in touch with ex-pats and international friends on a regular basis. This provides me with a global perspective on issues relating to finance, higher education, markets, etc. First and foremost, AEM serves as a public service to inform and educate student loan debtors. That is why I recently launched a new series - Living Abroad - to provide recent graduates with information on living and working outside of the U.S. The latest piece can be read here.

What is AEM? Why does it matter? 

Thanks to generous donations from readers, AEM officially became a 501(c)(4) in October of 2010.  While millennials are facing the highest level of student loan debt ever, my research shows that the student loan debt crisis is an inter-generational problem. There are a multitude of people from varying backgrounds and of different ages who are struggling or unable to pay off their debt. Although I still run AEM just as I had in the past, the organization is no longer asking for donations or actively involved in fundraising campaigns of any sort. There are complicated reasons for why I came to that decision, and part of the explanation can be read in a post entitled, "AEM is over."

History of AEM

All Education Matters began as a research and policy-based blog about the student loan debt crisis. I launched AEM in July of 2009 when I took a week of vacation from my publishing job. Since I am more than just a little bit familiar with the academic milieu (I was working on my Ph.D. to become a professor in the cultural and intellectual history of modern Europe), I wanted to create a blog that discussed higher education and academia. At the same time I was the promotional writer and marketer of social media for a student loan debt movement, so the nature of my work became focused on issues relating to student loan debt, defaulted borrowers, and so forth.

I made a point to write at least 2-3 times a week, and was able to make critical connections with people in D.C. (where I was residing at the time) who were (and are) part of higher education policy circles. In addition, I was meeting authors and activists whom I have respected for years, the most important being Barbara Ehrenreich. She is a woman I deeply admire, and that is because Barb is an intellectual and an activist. We've spent quite a bit of time together discussing various societal crises in the U.S., and of course a part of those discussions have been about student loan debt. (She's a big supporter of my work, which is humbling). More recently, I have been in frequent contact with Henry Giroux, a public intellectual who has deep concerns about the state of higher education in the U.S.


Top 6 Must-Reads  

Recently, I was asked by someone in Hollywood to send them links to what I believed to be the most important pieces I've written on the subject of student loan debt. So here they are (some of them are links above):

"Point/Counterpoint: Pell Grant Funding," Splashlife (originally posted on May 25, 2011)
(My piece on the issue is in favor of increasing Pell - Splashlife wanted two perspectives on the issues).

"Uemployed, educated, and indebted: More Millennials seeking work outside the U.S.," USA Today (originally posted May 17, 2011)

"Higher Education Under Attack: An Interview with Henry A. Giroux," Truthout.org (originally posted April 22, 2011)

"How do Student Loans Affect my Credit Reports and Credit Scores?" EduTrends (originally posted March 4, 2011)

"The New Indentured Educated Class: If only they had their health . . .," New England Journal of Higher Education, November 18, 2010

"Student Loan Debtor Confesses: 'I think about jumping out of the 27th floor window of the office every day," Huffington Post (originally posted December 20, 2010)

"Plight of Current Borrowers: An Appeal for Immediate Relief," Paper delivered at a convention sponsored by the Rainbow PUSH Coalition and the Rev. Jesse Jackson (submitted when I was unable to attend as a panelist)



AEM's logo was designed by graphic designer Paul Ramirez

Repost - Investigating Law Schools (Class Action Case)

Copyright Notice: If you are not reading this at All Education Matters, and unless I've explicitly given an individual or entity permission to publish my work, this post has been illegally appropriated. Please read original content here.


If you attended one of the law schools listed below, please reach out to me via email (ccrynjohannsen@gmail.com). I know someone who is doing extensive research on these institutions, and they'd like to talk to former graduates.



  • Albany School of Law
  • New York Law School
  • Pace Law School
  • Touro Law School
  • Hofstra Law School
  • California Western School of Law
  • Chapman University School of Law
  • Golden Gate Law School
  • McGeorge Law School/University of Pacific (#100)
  • Southwestern University School of Law
  • Thomas Jefferson School of Law
  • Western State University
  • Witter College of Law
  • Thomas Cooley School of Law

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Why Does The Sun Go On Shining? Why Does The Sea Rush to Shore?

The answer to these and other pressing questions can be found here, with a Big Hair Bonus.  (And yes, I would embed, but YouTube won't let me.  Buncha intellectual property pansies, if you ask me.)


For a brief history of Skeeter Davis, born Mary Penick, go here.  Here's hoping you survive the day, and if you don't, that we encounter each other in that Big Blogger Meetup in the Sky.

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Love Is A Many Splendored Thing Department: This Week's Sexual News In Review

Happier Days?  Photo credit.
I want to start out by saying that there are more men than Arnold Schwarzenegger who have children that they know about but did not acknowledge to their wives and the children they live with until much, much later in the game.  I have met four in my lifetime, quite ordinary men who were not governor of anything, so it's not really that rare.  But I have the same question about all of them, large and small:  how do you hide a second family?  And more important, how many people have to be paid off not to reveal that you have a second family when you are governor of California?

Personal responsibility is definitely taking a hit this week, since it turns out that pedophile priests are not responsible for their actions, and the church was not responsible for supervising them.  No,  it's what you suspected all along: the collective power of queers and fornicators to ruin innocent lives is too powerful, even for God!  According to a five year study commissioned by the Catholic Church, the sexual abuse of children and teens by priests rose dramatically in the 1960's "because priests who were poorly prepared and monitored, and were under stress, landed amid the social and sexual turmoil of the 1960s and ’70s."  The report, commissioned by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, and executed by a "research team" from John Jay College to the tune of $1.3 million, must be a great relief to the Universal Church.  "The bishops," so reporteth the New York Times, "have said they hope the report will advance the understanding and prevention of child sexual abuse in society at large." Probably not.  It probably won't advance the understanding of sexual abuse in the church either.

If it is true that it never occurred to priests to abuse children until they were put under such intense psychological pressure by other people having sex, that would mean it could never happen again.  How do I know this?  I'm a historian, of course.  My analysis of the data (done for free, just this morning, and I offer it to the Pope out of shame for how queer people hurt these poor priests) has revealed the 1960s are not only over, but will probably never happen again.  Only the law of circular time, which governed Aztec history prior to their conquest (and conversion to the One True Faith) by Spain in the early 16th century, would suggest otherwise, and everyone knows that in the United States we live in linear time. 

And the Church wants to know why people don't take it seriously anymore?  Mary, please.

In other news, Dominique Strauss-Kahn has resigned as head of the IMF following charges that he tried to rape a chambermaid.  Strauss-Kahn, whose nickname is "Hot Rabbit," according to the New York Daily News, is in Riker's Island, asserting his innocence.  57% of French citizens also think he has been set up by his political enemies.

I would take this even possibility even semi-seriously except for two things:  one is that French people think Americans are too hysterical for words about sex, which is true, but I doubt that the NYPD would have walked into this $hit $torm unless they believed the woman (and why would an immigrant woman and a single mother call attention to herself in this way unnecessarily? I ask you.)  More important in my calculus is the number of powerful American men who have firmly asserted their innocence and/or threatened to bury people for spreading rumors about them that turned out not only to be true, but part of a pattern of out of control and/or criminal sexual behavior.  For example, Ah-nohld and his campaign staff responded viciously to charges of sexual harassment:  in 2003, one woman sued then-governor Schwarzenegger, charging that he and his staff had spread false rumors that she was a convicted felon.  And do you recall that president who did not have sexual relations with that woman -- except that, actually, it turned out that he did?  And John Edwards, who first lied about, and then finally admitted, having had an affair with videographer Rielle Hunter, but denied being the father of her child -- except that it turns out he is?

There seems to be a certain kind of man -- and not surprisingly, he is usually a rich and powerful one (The Council of Bishops, The Leader of the Free World or Aspiring LOTFW, The Governor, The Banker Of The Planet) -- who thinks that if he just asserts something is so the rest of us are bound, by some strange compact, to believe him.  Surely this is a much more interesting topic for historical analysis than the strange theory that priests crumbled under the weight of birth control, gay liberation and abortion, and were forced to calm their nerves by diddling children.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Fleeing the Economic Dust Bowl: Indebted, Jobless Refugees . . .

Copyright Notice: If you are not reading this at All Education Matters, and unless I've explicitly given an individual or entity permission to publish my work, this post has been illegally appropriated. Please read original content here.


 . . . seeking asylum from U.S. economic slavery . . . which countries might be willing to take us in?


Living Abroad: One expat says, "I don't know if I'll live in the U.S. ever again."

Copyright Notice: If you are not reading this at All Education Matters, and unless I've explicitly given an individual or entity permission to publish my work, this post has been illegally appropriated. Please read original content here.

Since many of you have expressed an interest in knowing what it was like for me to live and work abroad, AEM has launched a new series entitled, "Living Abroad." These pieces are about American expats who have lived or are living abroad. I am also exploring options of moving abroad again in a year or year and a half, and will be writing about that possibility (primarily here), as well as sharing my own experience of living and working in Korea. If you are interested in sharing your story with my readers, please don't hesitate to send me an email (ccrynjohannsen@gmail.com). Those of you who have yet to leave the country are also welcome to submit pieces. This series is part of a public service to let indentured educated citizens know that there are other options, and that they can find fulfilling opportunities beyond U.S. borders. 

It is with great pleasure that I introduce Todd Bruns, an expat who is currently living and teaching in Seoul. I have known Todd for over a decade. We met through my brother, and we've spent time together in Italy, Kansas, and Korea. At this point, I have a feeling we might end up hanging out again in Hongdae, because I already received a decent job offer in Korea again. But that is another complicated story. As for Todd, he runs an absolutely hilarious blog, Nintendo is Right, Nascar is Wrong. He has a quirky, highly-intelligent outlook on things, so his blog comes highly recommended (hint: if you enjoy numerous laugh-out loud moments, while reading, then check his work out now). 

Let's hear what Todd had to say about life abroad and in Korea. 

Johannsen: Tell us what you do and where you live?

Bruns: I'm an English Teacher at a private language academy.  I live two miles northeast of downtown Seoul. 

Johannsen: How long have you lived in Korea? Why did you choose Korea to work?

Bruns: Oy, I feel like you're a drunken ajjoshi at the bar right now.  I worked here for 2 years, returned home, then came back, and I've been back about a year and a half.   I came here because the money/benefits here are better than Taiwan or China, and it's too difficult to get a job in Japan.  

Johannsen: What are the things you enjoy most about living in Korea?

Bruns: I love my new neighborhood. It's easy to get anywhere in town, and the hood itself has a lot going on, with tons of good restaurants.  Korean public transit is awesome.  For my money, Seoul has the best subway system in the world. Traveling around Korea is easy too, there are tons of buses and trains, and they are much cheaper than those in the US.  I like waking up at noon every day.  The internet connections are often super fast, and there's really no copyright law to worry about.  Lots of the people are very cool.  

Johannsen: What are the drawbacks?

Bruns: Stares, jingoism, super obnoxious nationalism.  Everything is last minute.  Schools often change parts of the schedule with little to no notice.  

Johannsen: [Laughing]. Yes, I remember once being on the subway and a man used his head like an escalator going downward to stare at me being whisked away. I found it quite shocking, because I was in Seoul and close to Itaewon. I thought, "oh, come on! You've seen a Westerner before?" Oh, well . . . maybe I was his first. So, yeah, I definitely don't miss the stares and the hundreds - or so it seemed - of random strangers coming up to me on the streets to merely say, "hello!" every time I stepped foot out of my apartment. Being a museum object is no fun. Now I'm back in the crumbling Empire and am anonymous. Hooray! 

Bruns: Yup.

Johannsen: I've also heard that it is becoming more difficult to find decent jobs in Korea, do you think that's accurate? How have work prospects changed for, and I hate this term, newbies?

Bruns: It is. Until the U.S. economy rebounds, it won't be any easier to get a decent gig here.  I recently went through a job search, and I was rejected by a couple of schools that I didn't actually have any interest in working at.  Pay has been stagnant here for years, but prices continue to climb.  

Johannsen: Do you think you'll ever return to the U.S. and live here permanently?

Bruns: I'm not sure.  I definitely won't stay in Korea forever, but I don't know if I'll ever live in the US full time again. It's a big world.   

Johannsen: Since you've been gone, how often have you come back to the U.S.?

Bruns: I moved back once before returning here.  Since then, I made one trip to the US for 2 weeks.  

Johannsen: Do you have any student loan debt or credit card debt?

Bruns: Nope.  I had credit card debt when I got here, but I paid it off my first year.   

Johannsen: Any tips or advice for those interested in living and working in Korea? 

Bruns: Live in Seoul.  If you want to live like a Westerner and embrace the bubble (and trust me, after the honeymoon period, most people do),  then Seoul is the only place to live. If you have romantic notions about leading the most Korean life possible, then again, live in Seoul.  Half the population lives in Seoul and its suburbs, so it's obviously the most "Korean" place in the country.  If you don't want to live in Seoul, live in Busan.  Busan is awesome too.  You don't want rural.  Korea doesn't have any pastoral New England towns in the countryside.  Rural Korean towns are impovershed hellscapes with nothing to do.  Learn to read Hanguel.  It's easy to do and it's the single most helpful thing you can do for yourself.  Also, don't believe the idiots at Dave's ESL.  

Johannsen: Dave's has a propensity to attract all sorts of folks, so I think it's important to take some of their comments with a grain of salt. Todd knows Korea like the back of his hand. I do not. But I do agree with him on living in Seoul. That's where you want to be, or least on a subway line that goes directly into the city. 


Seoul's Best Hidden Secret: The Subway

Related Links


From AEM




From Margins of Everyday Life






Tuesday, May 17, 2011

More investigating . . .

Digging into old earth.

The Chaz Project: Gender, Celebrity And The Emergence Of An FTM Activist

Chaz Bono, with Billie Fitzpatrick, Transition:  The Story of How I Became A Man (New York:  Dutton, 2011).  244 pages.  Illustrations, index. $25.95.

Becoming Chaz (Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato, 2010).  88 minutes.  Premiered at Sundance Festival and on the Oprah Winfrey Network (May 10 2011).

Famous people live in bubbles; the children of famous people also live in bubbles, and benefit much less from the experience.  Witness Chaz, the only child of Salvatore "Sonny" Bono and Cherilyn Sarkisian, otherwise known as Cher. One of the many criticisms that will doubtless emerge about Chaz Bono's revised history, one that centers his gender transition and his new life as an embodied man, will be some version of this: how can a person who has had access to every possible advantage represent himself as an average transman?  To this I have two answers:
Everyone's life is worth saving, no matter how rich his parents are, and;
One of the ways that rich people are different is that their books get published and distributed widely when other, equally good or better, books do not.  Get used to it.
Timed to come out together, Transition and Becoming Chaz, tell Chaz's story about his journey to a fully male identity.  They are part of an activist project, in which Chaz hopes to use his fame to reach out to other people who may be struggling with their own or a loved one's gender transition and promote tolerance towards queerly gendered people.  They are also a long-term public relations project, through which Chaz has struggled to represent himself rather than be represented by the tabloid press.  Together, for those of us who are more up to speed on trans politics and trans studies, these newly released accounts of Bono tell us less about the world of gender politics and gender transition technology than they tell us about the world of celebrity.

However, those who simply take celebrity for granted and know bupkis about transgender or transsexual lives may learn some things they need to know.  For example:
  • Kids who grow up into people who want to transition have very active inner lives that are gendered differently from the way their bodies present.
  • Puberty stinks even worse for trans people than it does for cisgendered people.
  • People who transition from female to male may initially come out as butch lesbians (but not all butch lesbians identify as trans.)
  • Parents often do not respond well to gender transition.
  • Girlfriends who appear to be on board with gender transition can still be self-centered and mean.  Sometimes they bail out.
  • Injectable testosterone works faster than Androgel.
  • Lots of psychotherapy is recommended. 
  • Having lots of gay friends doesn't necessarily make a person sophisticated when it comes to actually having a queer kid.  (Cher is an excellent example of this:  did I say that lots of psychotherapy is recommended?  And Sonny, who seemed not to care that he had a queer kid, then cosponsored the Defense of Marriage Act.)
  • Having lots of psychotherapy, a big book contract, and the admiration of thousands of transmen doesn't mean that when people call you fat, weird and ugly; or make sexist, homophobic and transphobic jokes at your expense, it doesn't hurt.  A lot. (Editorial clarification:  Chaz has always been attractive, but in his new incarnation has an inner confidence and a sunny smile that makes him about as good or better looking as any other middle-aged Italian American guy.)
OK, so for those of you who knew fewer than five of the things I listed above, you should go read the book. If you have limited time, are only interested in the FTM part of Chaz's life story, and are curious about the nature of celebrity, I would say watch the movie.  The first two-thirds of the book are a revision of Chaz's coming-out-as-a-lesbian story (which someone of my age might recall was pretty awful) that accounts for his male identity.  It also includes a survey of Chaz's descent into drug abuse, which is a cautionary tale worth reading.  Having known several people who became addicted to drugs like Vicodin and Oxycontin, this actually can happen to anyone. Chaz was getting legal scrips for so much high-dosage Oxy that he had to go to a hospital pharmacy to get them filled, and even the pharmacists did not bat an eye, much less call the DEA or the California medical licensing board.

I am not sure whether it will matter to you, but:  there are better books about trans lives out there, and if you follow the links in this post, you will find them.  Chaz speaks only for himself but, in trying to reach a far broader audience (in what has to be a rudimentary general education project if it is to succeed in Omaha as well as in Los Angeles), the book tends not to be very aware of its own limitations.  Chief among these are the essentialist story it tells about gender, the book's main preoccupation; and its failure to address class, age and race.  Transitioning to a male body and a male social identity are quite different experiences for different people, as are the life histories that lead up to these transitions.  Although there are common themes, transmen have very different life stories, as do transwomen.  Generation matters: there are a significant number of people, particularly very young ones, for whom challenging gender as a system of power means living between or outside categories as a genderqueer person.  So Chaz's story is the 100-level course.  If you want the 200 level course, go to Susan Stryker and Stephen Whittle, The Transgender Studies Reader (Routledge:  2006); if you want a better memoir, and one that tells the MTF story where our heroine gets to keep the girl and the kids, my favorite is Jennifer Finney Boylan, She's Not There:  A Life In Two Genders (Broadway Books, 2003).

Which brings us to class.  While having access to lots of money hasn't made Chaz's life a happy one (one might argue the opposite, in fact), the book has nothing to say about the vast number of trans kids who are entirely without resources, even to feed, clothe or house themselves.  It is a sad fact that most people in America are poor, whether they are gender normative or not.  It is a sadder fact that vast numbers of gender non-conforming youth are bullied at school, abused by their families, and end up on the streets fending for themselves.  Many of these kids, particular male-bodied trans kids, are sex workers, as their foremothers were.

It is also the case that Chaz appears to be choosing trans children as his issue, having been a neglected and abused child himself, and it may be that as an activist he begins to hone in on the cross-class dimensions of this issue as well as the surgical abuse of intersexed children. Childhood was a bad time for Chaz, and while his boyishness is the part of that story that is central to the book, he was alternately cherished and neglected.  He  suffered emotional abuse from one nanny in particular, who terrorized him when his mother was absent for large stretches of time. While we don't get details about his upbringing that stray far from the gender story, Chaz seems to go out of his way to understand and account for his parents' lapses, and being a victim of the press himself, is probably kinder to them than they deserve. 

One result of parental neglect was that Sonny and Cher failed to notice that their child went to any number of schools but didn't really learn to do anything except to be a public person:  everything else he has taught himself.  In a way this doesn't seem odd, given Sonny and Cher's route to success.  Cher was singing professionally at 16 when she teamed up with her 27 year-old partner, and my guess is that one or both were high school dropouts. Chaz was repeatedly pulled out of school by Cher to accommodate her career, and allowed to make his own decisions about whether and where he attended school (this meant living in New York with friends and attending the High School for Performing Arts) by the time he was fourteen.  While Chaz returned to college in mid-life, his only real work -- other than three years of trying to break into the music business -- has been to use his celebrity to do political advocacy, mostly for GLBT rights.

Don't imagine that Transition will give you many insights into the inner life of a transman the way lesser-known, but more complex, autobiographies like Jamison Green's Becoming a Visible Man (Vanderbilt,  2004) and Max Wolf Valerio's The Testosterone Files (Seal Press, 2006) will.  The story Chaz has to tell is a carefully crafted one that is intended to educate, but not to reveal much about who he really is or what he really feels. Because of this, the most affecting moments are not in the book, but in Becoming Chaz when we watch Bono watching his mother in the well-orchestrated television appearances and interviews that are designed to voice her support for him.  And yet, even then, she can't seem to bring herself to refer to Chaz with male pronouns.  Like, ever.  Which is a little strange given the fact that she is an actress.  The expression on Chaz's face as Cher "forgets" her lines, over and over, is unforgettable, as is his rush to forgive her for doing so.  Nothing in the book is so ambivalent or complex as these moments when gender is temporarily displaced by the drama of the celebrity child.

Investigating Law Schools

Copyright Notice: If you are not reading this at All Education Matters, and unless I've explicitly given an individual or entity permission to publish my work, this post has been illegally appropriated. Please read original content here.


If you attended one of the law schools listed below, please reach out to me via email (ccrynjohannsen@gmail.com). I know someone who is doing extensive research on these institutions, and they'd like to talk to former graduates.



  • Albany School of Law
  • New York Law School
  • Pace Law School
  • Touro Law School
  • Hofstra Law School
  • California Western School of Law
  • Chapman University School of Law
  • Golden Gate Law School
  • McGeorge Law School/University of Pacific (#100)
  • Southwestern University School of Law
  • Thomas Jefferson School of Law
  • Western State University
  • Witter College of Law
  • Thomas Cooley School of Law