out1 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1969 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA Vol. 93, No. 10 The O Injustice lurks by Mike Barrett Nebraskan Staff Writer Editor's note: This is the first in a series of three stories about the University's Trl-University Program. America honors many great men. Unfortunately, America tends to ig nore their great ideas. Presidents Thomas Jefferson, George Washington, and most presidents since them, have spoken of "an informed and enlightened citizenry," as vital to the life and growth of a democracy. The late Senator Robert F. Kennedy and President Richard M. Nixon tried to explain the "tragic disillusion ment." of American youth. Dr. S. I. Hayakawa, Dr. Merk Hobson and anyone's school principal can talk of ''fostering a spirit of experiment and discovery" through education. Yet most American children are schooled for years with misinforma tion. They are kept unenlightened. How can a whole generation become "disillusioned" unless fed illusions throughout their lives. And in many cases, the educational system stifles, kills or both much of the excitement of discovery and exploration. " Education project That this situation will not continue Is the business of the Tri-University Project in Elementary Education. More specifically, the project at tempts to "come to a picture of op timum real situations in which children might learn and, on the basis of these, to come to a picture of how teachers might be schooled," wrote Nebraska Director Paul A. Olson in the Project's first National Conference report, of September, 1967. In that year the project was, ac cording to Olson, "conceived in the belief that the schooling of teachers is the major job of a large portion (if the colleges and universities of the country. They have not always done the job well. They cannot continue to do it badly." Under U.S. Office of Education auspices, Washington University, New York University and Nebraska University are conducting programs in the training of elementary teachers in social science, behavioral science and English. But Nebraska's pro grams not only deal with English, Council applicants must file by Friday The deadline for applications for members of the Council on Student Life is Friday, Oct. 3, with interviews scheduled for October 4 and 5, ac cording to Diane Theisen, ASUN first vice president "We wish more time was available, but it's very important that we pro ceed with selecting members of the CSL as soon as possible," Miss Theisen said. ASUN has been working for several years to implement students' rights in the area of student living, social and extra-classroom activities, she continued. The opportunity to participate in the policy-making has been achieved in the formation of the CSL. 13 members The Council will consist of 15 voting members. One member of the Under graduate Deans' Council will serve (is chairman; the Executive Dean of Student Affairs will be secretary; two professional staff members of the Student Affairs Office: the president of ASUN: seven students to be selected by ASUN with no more than two to be chosen from any college rmiiiiiimmHiiiiiiiiinuiHiHiiiimiiimmimiiiiHiiHiimiiiiiifiiiMiHiHiiiim wwwui'w ii iiiiii ii i .- i UIWI"- ii.i)jumiMMWU'iiii w m. , .. . i. immjpggjyfimm Mil ' '"M 0 v. ,t. YA. a . K a ; r uTs "ilk. i .... ' ' ., JSP'- m ji "' ,! V ASUN Senator Randy Prier discusses his motion to create a senate committee for the investigation student legal rights. tSee story on Tage 4.) but with the entire learning environ ment, process and curriculum. What are the conditions that have led to such great demand for new methods of instructing teachers, new methods of teaching, and, in fact, a demand for a "new" teacher The first of these problems is the result of a gap between theory and practice. Olson says, "one of the more curious inconsistencies of the last 30 years of teaching education in this country has been between the persis tent . . . effort to remind elementary teachers that individual students are very different from one another and require curricula adjusted to their 'needs,' and the widespread failure to apply the same principle to the education of the teachers themselves." Colleges and certification agencies often act as though they must determine an ideal teacher training program, assuming that there are ef fective college courses and teachers, and ideal schools to which ideal teachers might go, containing perfectly intellectual children and a coherent curricula, he added. Students are individuals As most educators will admit, students come from a multiplicity of backgrounds and communities, often with totally individual assets, pro blems and special needs. Yet both curricula and teachers, on a na tionwide basis, are designed for the abstract "ideal," an ideal program, usually unsuited to the less than ideal "qualifications" and needs of minority or deprived children. Olson suggests that training pro grams should "allow for the springing up of schools as local and as different as are the enclaves from which children come. "Should we not encourage the crea tion of a series of different kinds of elementary schools where teachers-to-be may try their wings?" he suggests. Adding, "I would suspect that one way to operate would be to admit teachers in training, at the beginnings of their careers, to a variety of kinds of classrooms where they could act as observers, paraprofessionals or tutors." or living unit; and three faculty to be nominated by the University Senate Committee on Committees and appointed by the president. "The CSL will have general policy making power over all student social and out-of-class activities, subject to approval by the Board of Regents," she said. Some of the other responsibilities of the CSL are: to assume the current responsibilities of the Senate Com mittee on Student Affairs and its sub committees; to make judgments concerning the equitable participation of students bx the decision-making processes of the University ; to develop concepts, initiate action and make appropriate recommenda tions. Time is short "We're sorry that time is so short," Miss Theisen said, "But we're urging anyone interested to apply flllout an application and interview time." Interested students should go to the ASUN office, Km. 335. Nebraska Uni on, as soon as possible or telephone 172-2581. in human relations, A more specific problef in the area of limited teachers and teaching methods is dealing with various minority, group studies, Olson added. The United States is violently shaken with riots. Cities have been burnt and will burn, to the ground. Every politician has called for un derstanding, cooperation and con ciliation. And yet S. I. Hayakawa can receive standing ovations for pointing out in his speeches that he opposes increased black student admission because he "wants those students who worked very hard and got good grades." Dr. Arthur Pearl of the University of Oregon said in a speech before the Fifth National Tri-University con ference, "That is an out-and-out racist statement . . . The second you set up admission standards that are based on crude race, class and ethnic bases, all you're doing is perpetuating the worst aspects of. our society? "And you make it impossible for free intellectual discussion to occur. When will it be possible for you to confront an Eldridge Cleaver and help him with his critical thinking, if you him with his critical thinking, if you deny him access to your institution? And that happens in every single elementary school as well as ever' university." Fear to confront He summarized this problem of education by charging that, "The reason we're in trouble in elementary school and everywhere else is tha' we are afraid to confront each other.' Another dimension of this problen is the limited variety of ethnic ex perience of the teacher. Gene Hardy, University project coordinator, blasted the type of teacher who wil' "run into the 'lower class' school 'teach' and run out before dark." Hi added, "We don't want the teache who will make a kid feel like a 'nir ger' from day one." Olson said, "The new trainers an elementary teachers given t h i troubles of our big cities, the area' of rural 'backwardness' and so forth, have to keep an eye on the stree and the school if they are to trair teachers who do not alienate thei students. "They will have to learn to tall to kids who know the street and thf ghetto at its most difficult. They will have to know how and what the "home teaches, and how it can mesh with or fail to mesh with, what school" do." Text book Inadequacy Not only are teachers often inadc quate to deal with minority culture? curricula and textbooks are frighter ingly so. Las spring Dr. Jules Henry, c Washington University contended thr. most schools teach "legitimate socia stupidity." He points out several ex amples. Basic Social Studies has six pages dealing with cotton in the U.S., three are cartoons and pictures of a white boy who lives on a "cotton Chancellor-less9 University . . . Ag prof By John Dvorak Nebruskan Staff Writer The University should not have a chancellor, according to Dr. Bert M. Evans, assistant professor of agricultural economics. "The university is ruled by an autocratic system, with the position farm" giving a report on cotton to a class of white students who also live on "cotton farms." No blacks are pictured or mentioned. Johnson and Craven in their "American History," 1961 edition, discuss the rapid solution to Negro problems in this country, and to prove it, on page 641 there is a picture of Jackie Robinson playing baseball. In the 1965 high school text, a more honest account of the Negro is given, yet the old 1961 'information' is reprinted, unchanged (even with the picture of Jackie Robinson) Biased viewpoints "Your Life as a Citizen" contains no black pictures, and only mentions that Negroes have equal protection under the law. "Our United States, A Bulwark of Freedom," contains nothing on the contemporary Negro. "Basic Social Studies 5," 1964, carries the student through the presidency of John F. Kennedy, but the latest reference to the Negro is the Civil War. As Olson points out, "Our 'history is the history of the several million llllllillllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllillllllflH CJ pi 4. ,W" v.- a evises new of chancellor at the top, followed by the positions of deans, directors and department chairmen," Evans charged Wednesday. Too often, decisions by ad ministrators are made not with the welfare of the University In mind, but with an eye to pleasing the next highest administrator on tlw autocratic ladder, Blvaus suid. There Ls no democratic rcpttsetita ion in university government, he -ontinued. In fact, the university lidn't profit at all from the American -evolution: it still resembles a medieval feudal system. One of the main defects of universi y government is the lack of rules and by-laws, according to Evans, who received a Ph.D. from Harvard in 1966. "A rural Nebraska county of 10.000 '.o 13,1X10 people often has enough statutes to fill a room," Evans said. "The University's rules are in a book )iie half inch thick." Perhaps the greatest problem, 'lowever. Is that the average professor doesn't care about university govern ment. Most professors are interested in heir subject matter and research, not in governing the school, he said. They remain apathetic as long as the autocratic government doesn't pinch them. If the autocratic decisions o f university administrators does bother the professor, he generally moves ti another university. "Actually the student fesls more a part of the university community than the professor," Evans continued. "The student has selected the university for four years of study. The profassor could be just as happy at Wisconsin or Michigan, and if he is unh.ippy here, he thinks nothing of moving." Evans' o lifelong resident of American Indians, the history of the twenty million and more American Negroes, the civilizations and pasts of the Asian peoples among our citizens, and the history of the magnificent southern American-Spanish-Indian civilizations. "Our commitment to understand, know and support non-English speak ing peoples is going to require further that our teachers know the histories and the cultural achievements of the regions which ought to "belong" to all of us in imagination and sym pathy." Dr. Alton Becker of Michigan adds that the idea that "culture starta in Greece and Rome, moves to Europe, England and then to us is one of the most harmful things we perpetuate in our schools, perhaps "the source of most of our present troubles in Asia." Becker is engaged in the teaching of Asian literature and linguistic rhetoric. Human relations Pearl says that not only have schools, from elementary on up, neglected the most important issue facing our country, human relations, but have actually done much harm. u Dr. Bert Evans believes that the University should not Nebraska, has a solution. He has discussed It with only a few people, and he admits It is unprecedented. "We should have a duly elected commission, committee or whatever you want to call it, of about 15 staff members and 13 students," Evans stated. The number is arbitrary and could be 12 and 12 or 20 and 20. Most im portantly, they would be elected an nually and by members of the University community who would all have equal voting rights. "The first duty of this super-committee would be to sit down and ham mer out an explicit set of bylaws." he said. "Then the bylaws could be negotiated with the Board o f Regents." Evans would not alter the Board of Regents. They are tho democratically elected body representing people outside th e University while the super-committee would be the democratically elected body representing people inside th' school. The super-committee, after arriving at the by-laws and rules, would hire an administrator, much as municipalities do now under the city manager form, of government. This administrator or manager, and his subordinates, would rule th University according to the rules and by-laws, not according to their personalities or whims. The present system fosters a number of undesirable things, Evans said. There is a tendency to trampie upon student and staff rights and disregard the interests of the group as a whole. "The current system promotes lad der climbing b y administrators because it's important, to agree and conform with what people just above you want," he said. history '"Not only do we deny students an opportunity to express themselves, but we also saddle them with lies," he says. "We spend a lot of time lying to kids about their history, distorting it to a point where they're absolutely crippled. "We have taught all our kids to be racists. We have lied to them right along. We have minimized the fact that this nation practiced slavery. We minimized the fact that this was a nation that practiced genocide and wiped out whole Indian nations. We have practiced wars of aggression. All of this is kept from the American students." . All of these, the avoidance of any serious confrontation, the teachers' ignorance of the street and of non-middle-class affairs and the biases and the evasions of textbooks and curricula have combined to rob minority students of their history and pride, according to Jules Henry. And, as Dick Gregory has said, "A man without a knowledge of himself and his history is like a tree with no roots." Next: More schooling, less learning. a is 21 22 16 11 23 24 25 26 27 - 'a & 1 "1 have a chancellor. system As the governmental structure is formed now, the ultimate power rests with the chancellor, Evans said. The faculty and students have no right . no representation no power and no voice. The only thing that saves the University at all is that the ad ministration is by nature not autocratic, Evans said. For the most part, those in power are not dictators; they are generally interested in the welfare of the University. "It's not necessarily the man who is autocratic," he emphasized. "It's the position of chancellor or dean or department chairman that's autocratic." He termed the autocracy at NU as mild and benevolent. Everything that Is wrong with University government now wan wrong 50 years ago, Evans said. But now, the University has greatly in creased its importance. The information gap is rapidly widening, he said. It's the responsibility of the University to help close that gap. The importance of classroom in struction is actually going down, he continued. The greatest need is adult understanding and this must be generated out of the university. "The university has really become the center of American life," he said. "No longer is it simply an assembly of fraternity men and sorority girls. There are a lot more people gouqr to school now for a lot of different reasons." Despite the increasing importance of the university, the institution is still not utilizing its vast resources in making decisions. "The super-committee idea would really work," Evans insisted. "The group would utilize the talents of a wide range of staff members and students, something that isn't done flow." v. 5 V-. "-; M V