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Cracking the Eggheads
by Burt Prelutsky
There is currently a brouhaha brewing here in Los Angeles. On one side are the
highly-educated academicians at UCLA, while on the other side are all the really smart
people.
It seems that a young UCLA alum named Andrew Jones came up with the nifty
notion of getting students to tape their professors' lectures. He figured that was the one
sure way to discover whether or not the pedants are really just a bunch of leftist windbags
using their lecterns as soap boxes, indoctrinating rather than instructing.
Now you might think that the instructors would delight in the fact that their
lectures would now be broadcast far and wide. As a writer, I know I appreciate it when a
reader lets me know that he's shared one of my essays with his friends and relatives. So,
how is it that all these academics are screaming about censorship and a return to
McCarthyism? Have they no idea how stupid they sound? It's censorship when the
government deprives you of free speech, not when your words are given wider
dissemination. As for Joe McCarthy, he tried to get professors fired for their political
beliefs; young Mr. Jones, who isn't even a dog catcher, let alone a U.S. senator, hasn't
demanded that anyone be dismissed. He just thinks it would be a good idea if parents
were aware of what's in store for their kids before sending them off to spend four
expensive years at my alma mater.
If there's anything that professors, no matter what their political persuasion might
be, should be riled up about, it's the notion of publish-or-perish. The idea that these
people should be cranking out books and articles in order to prove their worth in the
marketplace is just plain cockeyed.
For one thing, with only a tiny number of exceptions, those who dwell in ivy-covered ivory towers don't know how to write a coherent, jargon-free, sentence. For
another, they are hired to teach. Writing and research may pad their income, but they
have nothing to do with their teaching skills. All they do is deprive the professors of time
they could better spend educating their students.
When you get right down to it, there is no more reason for academics to write
than for insurance agents to yodel.
When I read some of the attacks leveled against Mr. Jones, calling him a Nazi for
instance, and contending that any student bringing a tape recorder to class is nothing
but a Benedict Arnold in a sweatshirt, I can't help wondering in what parallel universe
such people reside.
What you say to your lawyer, your spouse, your priest or your shrink, is
privileged. But say something in a lecture hall filled with under-grads and expect it to be
confidential only proves that you're worse than a proselytizer, you're a moron. Anything
you say to wide-eyed 18-year-olds dependent on your good graces for a grade, you
should certainly be willing to say to their parents.
In fact, dear professor, inasmuch as your salary comes to you courtesy of the
poor, beleaguered California taxpayer, anything you say in a classroom is definitely our
business.
—(01/31/06)
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Mr. Prelutsky lives and writes in the San Fernando Valley.
He has been a humor columnist for the L.A. Times, a movie critic for Los Angeles magazine and has written for the New York Times, TV Guide, Modern Maturity, Emmy, Holiday, American Film, and Sports Illustrated.
For television, he has written for Dragnet, McMillan & Wife, MASH, Mary Tyler Moore, Rhoda, Bob Newhart, Family Ties, Dr. Quinn and Diagnosis Murder.
You can learn more about Burt and his latest book, Conservatives Are from Mars (Liberals Are from San Francisco) at his home page. Write Mr. Prelutsky at:
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