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SPEAK SOFTLY: Professors, please stifle the politics

Alex Carroll

Section: FORUM
Originally published: 8/27/08 at 11:26 PM EST
Last update: 8/27/08 at 11:24 PM EST
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Alex Carroll is a senior history major and writes 'Speak Softly' for the Daily News. His views do not necessarily agree with those of the newspaper.
Alex Carroll is a senior history major and writes 'Speak Softly' for the Daily News. His views do not necessarily agree with those of the newspaper.
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In a collegiate atmosphere, professors can take on many roles.

They take on the role of an educator first and foremost. This is what they are paid to do. They educate the next generation so when we go out into the real world, we may be able to leave it a little better than we found it. That's the idea, I suppose.

It is great when a professor can take on a role as a mentor in addition to their educational role. They do this by being the professors we seek out.

Of course, we usually seek out the professors we know something about. I have taken classes in the past where I knew that the instructor gave a take-home final.

But being sought out as a mentor is something entirely different. It shows that you have a level of respect for a professor. These men and women are masters of their crafts who you have chosen to guide your academic experience.

Professors I have come to greatly admire over the years have shared one common trait, and it is a trait that is quite difficult to keep every four years. It is being apolitical in the classroom.

Politics is front-and-center in society right now. We all know how immeasurably important this election is for our country. But in the classroom, it needs to take a back seat. It is distracting and can truly hurt the educational process.

This debate has been going on for sometime. What barriers should be present in the classroom? Should the election ever come up in any kind of a partisan way? What questions can a student be asked before their privacy is compromised?

I think it is safe to assume that verbal abuse of a student should never take place. It will, and it does, take place though. Mocking looks and muttered threats are far more common on this campus than many of us may believe. It should be the goal of the professor to help all students feel welcome.

Professors need to also refrain from sharing their opinions on the election. It may sound cold and callus, but it really is true.

One of the good things about Ball State is that of the two or three dozen professors I have had, almost all have been able to teach their course and help me be a better student without pulling politics into it.

The times it has happened, it has brought a dark cloud over that class, not to mention that professor. It has happened with professors who were on both sides of the political aisle.

It does occur to me that being in the humanities, I will have far more classes where politics is a factor. I imagine, but have no evidence, that politics rarely, if ever, comes up in disciplines such as the sciences, arts, etc. It is important in any class, but the humanities are much closer to the political pulse of America.

As we approach this election, I hope to see this campus covered in red and blue. I think that political involvement is a wonderful thing and this election will bring more young involvement than we have ever seen before.

Let's all just try to keep it outside the classroom.

Write to Alex at apcarroll@bsu.edu
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Viewing Comments 1 - 4 of 5

Thomas Miller

posted 8/28/08 @ 11:17 AM EST

Alex...

"I imagine, but have no evidence, that politics rarely, if ever, comes up in disciplines such as the sciences, arts, etc."

Certainly not in fine arts where say 80% of the professors are Marxists and 85% of the students are Anarchists. (Continued…)

Josh

posted 8/28/08 @ 1:08 PM EST

I'm not sure how this conclusion was arrived at, but how can one suppose that 80% of the art professors Marxists yet somehow their students are anarchists? If the students are being indoctrinated by statists, wouldn't the students be statists themselves. (Continued…)

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

Tony P

posted 8/28/08 @ 4:31 PM EST

There is nothing worse than having to sit through a course where the professor spends the majority of class discussing his political views. This is especially true if attendance is required, and your only choices are to I remember having to sit through my music theory class (as well as other classes that I have taken), a class that has nothing to do with politics, and having to listen to the instructor speak his mind for the majority of class. (Continued…)

zinester

zinester

posted 8/31/08 @ 8:35 PM EST

I had thought this column topic was innocuous and non-partisan enough that nobody would post anything REALLY stupid. I was wrong.

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